Legislative negotiators agree on opioid bill
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — A House-Senate conference committee has reached a bipartisan agreement on compromise legislation aimed at stopping Minnesota’s opioid crisis.
The bill imposes sharply higher registration fees on drug makers and distributors to raise around $21 million annually. Part of the money would go for grants to fund prevention strategies to reduce opioid deaths and overdoses.
Much of the rest would go to counties to help reimburse them for their growing child protection costs resulting from families being hurt by the opioid crisis.
Under the compromise, the registration fees would end once the state recovers at least $250 million from settlements with drug makers after a minimum of five years. House negotiators wanted those fees to be permanent, while Senate conferees insisted on the sunset. Settlement revenues would go to response efforts.
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