Commissioner Sean Rowey briefed the board on a new notice related to opioid litigation, saying the county had been asked whether it wanted to participate in a remnant settlement that staff described as one more agreement in a series of opioid settlements. Rowey said the settlement pool is approximately $97,625,000 and that Cowlitz County’s share would be a very small portion — about 0.04%, or roughly $42,000 — though staff did not have the amortization schedule or whether the payment will be a lump sum or spread over time.
Rowey distributed the county’s current settlement alignment that projects receipts from 2025 through 2038 and said the county expects about $450,000 in opioid-related receipts in 2026. He explained how opioid-related dollars have been used: interest earnings in 2026 were used to offset costs for local law enforcement and the prosecutor’s office, while opioid-fund principal has supported drug courts and mental-health responder programs. “There’s no strings attached [to this remnant payment],” a staff member said, but staff cautioned there are parameters limiting how opioid-settlement funds may be spent.
Staff told the board the deadline to express interest in participating is May 4 and asked for authority for the chair to electronically sign documents if the board wished to participate. Commissioners indicated they would provide the necessary approvals for signature; however, the transcript records discussion and a scheduling deadline rather than a formal recorded vote or ordinance authorizing signature.
Next steps: staff said they would circulate updated paperwork for signature and return with additional details about timing and any conditions on how funds may be used.