States

As States Dole Out Billions for Opioid Relief, Educators Rarely Get a Say

By Mark Lieberman — August 04, 2023 4 min read
Woman clutching knees next to prescription bottle: opioid crisis.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Educators won’t have much of a direct role in influencing how states will spend billions of dollars in legal settlement funds for addressing the opioid addiction crisis.

Most states have formed commissions or councils to oversee or directly control the flow of funding. But only three states—Arkansas, Illinois, and Nevada—have included a school district representative on their commission, according to an Education Week analysis of a database of state opioid council members published by Kaiser Health News.

Another three—Hawaii, Idaho, and Oklahoma—included someone from the state department of education (Hawaii’s state department of education functions as the state’s only school district). Two more—Connecticut and New Jersey—appointed a representative from a state agency for issues involving children and families. Another state, Maine, will retain a consultant from a school district to lead initiatives funded with a portion of the dollars set aside for K-12 education.

But more than two dozen states that have formed commissions didn’t include a single K-12 educator representative. Among those are opioid crisis hotspots like Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. A handful of remaining states haven’t yet formed commissions.

States have begun receiving a total of more than $50 billion in funds from legal settlements with companies like McKinsey, Purdue Pharma, and Walgreens that helped fuel the proliferation of opioids throughout the nation in recent decades. Close to 400,000 people died of opioid-related drug overdoses between 2015 and 2021, the most recent year for which federal data are available, and the deadliest year for opioid overdoses on record in the U.S.

School districts are seeing the impacts, including the massive increased costs of special education services and mental health counseling for children who were born to opioid-addicted mothers or suffered from trauma as the result of opioids in their households. Districts in many states are pursuing separate litigation of their own, arguing that drug manufacturers and marketers ought to bear responsibility for these increased costs.

Most commissions tasked with directing or advising policymakers on the flow of opioid relief funds primarily include medical professionals, social workers, and representatives of the criminal justice system, said Sara Whaley, a research associate for the Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health who helped construct the Kaiser Health News database.

But those aren’t the only areas of society that have been touched by the proliferation of deadly opioids.

“What we don’t think about are the secondary and tertiary impact of substance use disorders,” Whaley said. “We don’t think about the children of people with substance use disorder, and how that impacts them in their education.”

A lawyer representing school districts in their opioid litigation previously told Education Week that schools can be the “superstar of abatement"—hubs for prevention and treatment that break the cycle of drug use and set families on paths to healing.

When schools are less directly involved in crafting responses to the opioid crisis, Whaley said, programs designed to operate within districts can be more cumbersome to administer, might aim to fill needs schools and students don’t have, or might not end up being established at all.

“If you have folks from the sheriff’s department that are, like, ‘let’s do the school-based program, here’s money,’ and then the school system has to scramble to figure out how to implement that, that’s not a good process for sustainability,” Whaley said. “The school might use that money, do a program because they have to, and then there’s no follow-up or it’s just a one-off.”

The opioid crisis runs through schools and the students they serve

States’ plans for distributing the opioid money, and their approach to figuring out how to do so, vary widely.

Maine’s council overseeing spending for 50 percent of the state’s settlement allocation includes 15 members: public health professionals, a state lawmaker, a sheriff, a deputy police chief, and a county administrator.

While the council doesn’t include an educator, education isn’t completely absent from the group’s priorities. The state’s strategic plan for addressing opioid addiction and its effects includes provisions to expand behavioral health support and social-emotional learning in schools.

And unlike in most states, Maine’s school districts secured a guarantee that 3 percent of the state’s allocation will be awarded directly to them through competitive grant programs.

Gordon Smith, Maine’s director of opioid response, said the state’s opioid council is well-positioned to make good use of the funds. But he acknowledges that it will be impossible to address every priority to the fullest extent.

“The harms that have been done are so enormous and the needs are so great that this is a very modest amount of money to address them,” Smith said.

Allocating even a modest amount of money takes considerable time, too. The council has spent several early meetings crafting policies for transparency and conflicts of interest since many of its members work directly with organizations likely to apply for grant funding, Smith said.

Smith said the state’s commission plans to rely on a school district liaison to direct that portion of the funding.

Districts in most states have no such guarantee of funds from the settlement.

All the while, the urgency of the issue can’t be ignored. Seven children in Maine accessed their parents’ supply of fentanyl last year, and one of them died, Smith said. Schools must be part of the solution, he said.

“This problem doesn’t really get much better anywhere until we have fewer individuals start down that path,” Smith said.

A version of this article appeared in the August 23, 2023 edition of Education Week as As States Dole Out Billions for Opioid Relief, Educators Rarely Get a Say

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
Unlocking Success for Struggling Adolescent Readers
The Science of Reading transformed K-3 literacy. Now it's time to extend that focus to students in grades 6 through 12.
Content provided by STARI
Jobs Regional K-12 Virtual Career Fair: DMV
Find teaching jobs and K-12 education jubs at the EdWeek Top School Jobs virtual career fair.
Education Funding Webinar Congress Approved Next Year’s Federal School Funding. What’s Next?
Congress passed the budget, but uncertainty remains. Experts explain what districts should expect from federal education policy next.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

States Federal Appeals Court Upholds Texas Ten Commandments Law
The 9-8 decision delivered a boost to backers of similar laws in Arkansas and Louisiana.
3 min read
Students work under Ten Commandments and Bill of Rights posters on display in a classroom at Lehman High School in Kyle, Texas, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025.
Students work beneath Ten Commandments and Bill of Rights posters displayed in a classroom at Lehman High School in Kyle, Texas, on Oct. 16, 2025. A federal appeals court ruling now allows Texas to require such displays in public school classrooms.
Eric Gay/AP
States 'Not Our Job': Principals Decry a Proposal to Track Student Immigration Status
A principals group has publicly opposed efforts to require schools to track immigration status.
5 min read
Democratic Senator Raumesh Akbari hugs a young demonstrator as people gather to protest an immigration bill outside the Senate chamber at the state Capitol Thursday, in Nashville, Tenn. The bill would allow public school systems in Tennessee to require K-12 students without legal status in the country to pay tuition or face denial of enrollment, which is a challenge to the federal law requiring all children be provided a free public education regardless of legal immigration status.
Democratic state Sen. Raumesh Akbari hugs a young demonstrator as people protest an immigration bill outside the Senate chamber at the state Capitol on April 10, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. The legislation is part of a broader push in Tennessee to require schools to collect students’ immigration status, raising concerns among educators about trust, access, and compliance with federal law.
John Amis/AP
States A State With a Short School Year Wants to Stop the 'Bleeding' of Classroom Time
A new order aims to discourage districts from reducing instructional hours to fill budget gaps.
4 min read
A teacher and rising kindergarten students at Vose Elementary in Beaverton during story time on April 16, 2026. Gov. Tina Kotek asked the State Board of Education on Thursday to prohibit school districts from using student-contact days as furlough days to balance budgets, in order to preserve instructional time.
Story time in a kindergarten class at Vose Elementary School in Beaverton, Ore., on April 16, 2026. Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek has issued an executive order in hopes of blocking any further erosion of instructional time in a state that has one of the shortest school years in the country.
Mark Graves/The Oregonian via TNS
States The K-12 Issues That Top Governors' Agendas
Governors' priorities include early literacy, career education, and teacher recruitment.
7 min read
MVCS 5100
A classroom is bathed in light in Colorado Springs, Colo., Feb. 12, 2026.
Kevin Mohatt for Education Week