DHS Awards $8 million for Opioid and Stimulant Treatment Service
Tribal nation and county agencies to use funding from the State Opioid Response Grant Program to support local needs
Tribal Agencies
- Forest County Potawatomi: $93,000
- Ho-Chunk Nation: $238,134
- Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa: $268,682
County Agency
- Columbia County: $175,055
- Dane County: $269,535
- Dunn County: $143,646
- Green County: $177,983
- Jefferson County: $116,610
- Kenosha County: $365,214
- La Crosse County: $359,933
- Manitowoc County: $731,590
- Menominee County: $335,323
- Milwaukee County: $1,503,450
- Monroe County: $260,679
- North Central Health Care (Lincoln, Langlade, and Marathon counties): $216,367
- Racine County: $243,107
- Richland County: $129,907
- Rock County: $575,719
- Sauk County: $271,502
- St. Croix County: $259,828
- Unified Community Service (Iowa and Grant counties): $434,778
- Vilas County: $215,582
- Washington County: $231,387
- Waukesha County: $155,367
- Winnebago County: $313,422
This funding will be used to connect people to proven approaches to treatment. For opioid use disorder, this includes a model of care using one of three Food and Drug Administration-approved medications—buprenorphine, methadone, and naltrexone—as well as therapy and other recovery supports. For stimulant use disorder, this includes cognitive behavioral therapy and a practice known as the Matrix Model, which includes multiple therapies provided in a highly structured environment, as well as additional recovery supports.
These grant awards are funded by Wisconsin’s nearly $34 million share of the latest installment of the two-year State Opioid Response Grant Program through the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. In addition to providing funding for unmet treatment needs, DHS is using the $16.9 million available each year through this program to invest in a variety of prevention, harm reduction, treatment, and recovery projects, including the Dose of Reality and Real Talks Wisconsin initiatives; the distribution of NARCAN®, the opioid overdose reversal medication; and a program focused on connecting people who have experienced an overdose with recovery supports in their community.
Since 2017, more than 17,000 people have been connected to services with this annual funding. That’s when DHS first used federal grant funding focused on addressing the opioid epidemic to support treatment needs identified by tribal nations and counties. This funding began to cover the costs of stimulant treatment in 2020.
Search the Wisconsin Addiction Recovery Helpline’s website or call 211 for information on local treatment and recovery supports.
People interested in learning strategies to build healthy communities are invited to attend the Opioids, Stimulants, and Trauma Summit May 16-18 either in person in the Wisconsin Dells or virtually. Registration is required. The registration deadline is May 11. See the agenda and information on how to register.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
More about the Opioid Crisis
- MKE County: County Creates Easy Public Access To Overdose Data - Graham Kilmer - Feb 18th, 2025
- Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley and the Office of Emergency Management Launch New Overdose Dashboard - County Executive David Crowley - Feb 18th, 2025
- Fitzgerald Advances Legislation to Fight Opioid Epidemic - U.S. Rep. Scott Fitzgerald - Feb 6th, 2025
- Milwaukee Is Losing a Generation of Black Men To Drug Crisis - Edgar Mendez and Devin Blake - Jan 31st, 2025
- Milwaukee County’s Overdose Deaths Declined For Second Straight Year - Evan Casey - Jan 27th, 2025
- MKE County: United Community Center Awarded Drug Company Money For Addiction Treatment - Graham Kilmer - Jan 12th, 2025
- DHS Provides Update on Distribution of Latest Opioid Settlement Funds - Wisconsin Department of Health Services - Jan 9th, 2025
- Menominee Tribe Has 70% Decline in Overdose Deaths, Hospitalizations - Joe Schulz - Nov 27th, 2024
- Serenity Inns: A Proven Lifesaving Facility Denied Critical State Funding - Serenity Inns - Nov 19th, 2024
- Milwaukee County Outreach Team Going Door-to-Door Handing Out Narcan in High Overdose Areas - Evan Casey - Nov 14th, 2024
Read more about Opioid Crisis here
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