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Senate moves $5 million opioid rollover to Department of Public Health for treatment and diversion programs

April 03, 2026 | Senate, Alabama Legislative Sessions, Alabama


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Senate moves $5 million opioid rollover to Department of Public Health for treatment and diversion programs
The Alabama Senate adopted a floor substitute to House Bill 487 reallocating approximately $5,000,000 in unspent opioid-related rollover funds to the Department of Public Health for opioid treatment, diversion and related programs.

Senator Albritton—sponsor of the Senate substitute—said the funds are a rollover from last year that “hasn't been accomplished” in its prior allotment and explained the substitute transfers that $5,000,000 to the Department of Public Health "for the same purpose of which it was there for." He said the reappropriated funds will be used across multiple entities and purposes intended to deliver treatment and support, including USA Health programs, safer prescription/diversion reduction campaigns, EMS hotspots, integration support, specialty courts, district attorney diversion programs, child advocacy centers and forensic interview training (Senator Albritton).

Senators asked whether the funding would go to direct treatment centers or primarily to technical/educational programs. Albritton said the substitute is specifically intended to fund treatment and access—naming a mixture of clinical providers, diversion courts and other services—and that the opioid committee is overseeing reallocation to ensure the dollars are effective in treating individuals rather than being absorbed by agencies without direct treatment impact.

The Albritton substitute was adopted and HB487 passed by recorded roll (vote reported as 34 ayes, 0 nays). Supporters said the move is intended to improve oversight and accomplish previously authorized treatment goals that had not been implemented.

Why it matters: The reallocation is explicitly aimed at delivering treatment and diversion services for Alabamians affected by the opioid crisis; the sponsor listed specific recipient programs and emphasized oversight and effectiveness as priorities.

The Senate approved the substitute and transmitted the bill as appropriate.

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