close
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.
The city of St. Petersburg, Florida, is allocating $1 million from an opioid settlement to nonprofit organizations working to address the opioid crisis through treatment and recovery support services.
As part of the settlement, St. Petersburg will receive $6 million over 18 years.
The city is looking to fill resource or service gaps in the community and plans to use the money to offer grants for new and innovative proposals that are not already being funded by existing sources, the city said in a news release.
FLORIDA TRANSIT AGENCY INCREASING ACCESSIBILITY OF NARCAN TO HELP REVERSE OPIOID OVERDOSES
The city of St. Petersburg, Florida, is allocating $1 million from an opioid settlement to nonprofit organizations working to address the opioid crisis through treatment and recovery support services. (iStock)
Grants will be awarded to proposals that offer respite housing, overdose prevention, substance use prevention and education, harm reduction and peer support, with priority given to proposals that focus on respite housing, harm reduction and peer support.
“There’s never enough help for addiction as rates continue to increase,” Matthew Schaefer, the director of operations for Real Recovery Solutions, told Fox 13.
Real Recovery Solutions, which runs sober living facilities in Pinellas County and around the Tampa Bay region, is not eligible for the grant money but does work with non-profits that can use the funds to sponsor someone, the outlet reported.
OREGON REVERSES COURSE AND RECRIMINALIZES DRUG POSSESSION
As part of the settlement, St. Petersburg will receive $6 million over 18 years. (REUTERS/George Frey/File Photo)
“[Non-profits] will fund maybe two to three weeks of sober living. And give that recovering addict a chance to go find a job and start paying their own rent,” Schaefer said.
One of the biggest needs in the region, according to Schaefer, is making detox treatment more accessible and affordable. Many detox centers are privately funded and require full payment or insurance, but others have long wait lists to get a bed.
Grants will be awarded to proposals that offer respite housing, overdose prevention, substance use prevention and education, harm reduction and peer support. (AP)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
“[Addicts] are told, ‘hey, you know, we’re three to five days out from a bed.’ There’s a lack of resources for our underfunded or noninsured community. I think that that could be a big help. Unfortunately, that three to five days could really, truly be life or death,” Schaefer said.
Nonprofit groups were given until October 20 to apply for grant money through the city of St. Petersburg.
Mike Davis, a staunch ally of President-elect Donald Trump, had some harsh words for New…
close Video French President Macron asks if Europeans are 'ready to defend' their interests in…
close Video Ted Williams discusses investigation into missing Texas real estate agent Suzanne Simpson Former…
close Video Hundreds of raccoons take over woman's yard in Washington state The Kitsap County…
close Video Young Trump supporter surprised after election night Liam, an 8-year-old boy with a…
close Video Kenosha teen seen in video holding rifle, practicing technique: police A video allegedly…