By: Huffman, Nelson S.B. No. 1827
      West
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the creation of the opioid abatement account, an opioid
  abatement trust fund, and to a statewide opioid settlement
  agreement.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Chapter 403, Government Code, is amended by
  adding Subchapter R to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER R.  STATEWIDE OPIOID SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
         Sec. 403.501.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
               (1)  "Account" means the opioid abatement account
  established by Section 403.505.
               (2)  "Council" means the Texas opioid abatement fund
  council established by Section 403.503 to manage the distribution
  of money allocated to the council from the opioid abatement trust
  fund in accordance with a statewide opioid settlement agreement.
               (3)  "Fund" means the opioid abatement trust fund
  established by Section 403.506.
               (4)  "Released entity" means an entity against which a
  claim is released under a statewide opioid settlement agreement.
               (5)  "Statewide opioid settlement agreement" means all
  settlement agreements and related documents entered into by this
  state through the attorney general and opioid manufacturers,
  distributors, or retailers relating to illegal conduct in the
  marketing, promotion, sale, distribution, and dispensation of
  opioids that provide relief for this state and political
  subdivisions of this state.
               (6)  "Trust company" means the Texas Treasury
  Safekeeping Trust Company.
         Sec. 403.502.  SETTLEMENT RECORDS. The attorney general and
  comptroller shall maintain a copy of a statewide opioid settlement
  agreement, including any amendments to the agreement, and make the
  copy available on the attorney general's and comptroller's Internet
  websites.
         Sec. 403.503.  TEXAS OPIOID ABATEMENT FUND COUNCIL.
  (a)  The Texas opioid abatement fund council is established to
  ensure that money recovered by this state through a statewide
  opioid settlement agreement is allocated fairly and spent to
  remediate the opioid crisis in this state by using efficient and
  cost-effective methods that are directed to regions of this state
  experiencing opioid-related harms.
         (b)  The council is composed of the following 14 members:
               (1)  six regional members, appointed by the executive
  commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission, who are
  from academia or are physicians and who each are appointed to
  represent one of the following groups of regional health care
  partnership regions:
                     (A)  regions 9 and 10;
                     (B)  region 3;
                     (C)  regions 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, and 19;
                     (D)  regions 6, 7, 8, and 16; 
                     (E)  regions 1, 2, 17, and 18; and
                     (F)  regions 4, 5, and 20;
               (2)  four members who are current or retired health
  care professionals holding or formerly holding a license under
  Title 3, Occupations Code, with significant experience in treating
  opioid-related harms and who are appointed as follows:
                     (A)  one member appointed by the governor;
                     (B)  one member appointed by the lieutenant
  governor;
                     (C)  one member appointed by the speaker of the
  house of representatives; and
                     (D)  one member appointed by the attorney general;
               (3)  one member who is employed by a hospital district
  and is appointed by the governor;
               (4)  one member who is employed by a hospital district
  and is appointed by the attorney general;
               (5)  one member appointed by the governor and who is a
  member of a law enforcement agency and has experience with
  opioid-related harms; and
               (6)  one nonvoting member who serves as the presiding
  officer of the council and is the comptroller or the comptroller's
  designee.
         (c)  In making appointments under Subsection (b), the
  governor, lieutenant governor, speaker of the house of
  representatives, and attorney general shall coordinate to ensure
  that the membership of the council reflects, to the extent
  possible, the ethnic and geographic diversity of this state.
         (d)  The council is administratively attached to the
  comptroller.  The comptroller shall provide the staff and
  facilities necessary to assist the council in performing its
  duties.
         Sec. 403.504.  COUNCIL OPERATION. (a)  A council member is
  not entitled to compensation for council service but is entitled to
  reimbursement for actual and necessary expenses incurred in
  performing council duties.
         (b)  The council may hold public meetings as necessary to
  fulfill its duties under this subchapter.
         (c)  The council is subject to Chapters 551 and 552.
         Sec. 403.505.  OPIOID ABATEMENT ACCOUNT. (a)  The opioid
  abatement account is a dedicated account in the general revenue
  fund administered by the comptroller.
         (b)  The account is composed of:
               (1)  money obtained from a statewide opioid settlement
  agreement and deposited in the account under Section 403.507;
               (2)  money received by the state from any other source
  resulting directly or indirectly from an action by the state
  against an opioid manufacturer, an opioid distributor, or another
  person in the opioid industry relating to a violation of state or
  federal law on the manufacture, marketing, distribution, or sale of
  opioids, other than money distributed to a political subdivision of
  the state in accordance with the terms of a settlement agreement or
  judgment;
               (3)  money appropriated or transferred to the account
  by the legislature;
               (4)  gifts and grants contributed to the account; and
               (5)  earnings on the principal of the account.
         (c)  Money in the account may be appropriated only to a state
  agency for the abatement of opioid-related harms.
         (d)  The comptroller may use money appropriated to the
  comptroller from the account only to:
               (1)  prevent opioid use disorder through
  evidence-based education and prevention, such as school-based
  prevention, early intervention, or health care services or programs
  intended to reduce the risk of opioid use by school-age children;
               (2)  support efforts to prevent or reduce deaths from
  opioid overdoses or other opioid-related harms, including through
  increasing the availability or distribution of naloxone or other
  opioid antagonists for use by health care providers, first
  responders, persons experiencing an opioid overdose, families,
  schools, community-based service providers, social workers, or
  other members of the public;
               (3)  create and provide training on the treatment of
  opioid addiction, including the treatment of opioid dependence with
  each medication approved for that purpose by the United States Food
  and Drug Administration, medical detoxification, relapse
  prevention, patient assessment, individual treatment planning,
  counseling, recovery supports, diversion control, and other best
  practices;
               (4)  provide opioid use disorder treatment for youths
  and adults, with an emphasis on programs that provide a continuum of
  care that includes screening and assessment for opioid use disorder
  and co-occurring behavioral health disorders, early intervention,
  contingency management, cognitive behavioral therapy, case
  management, relapse management, counseling services, and
  medication-assisted treatments;
               (5)  provide patients suffering from opioid dependence
  with access to all medications approved by the United States Food
  and Drug Administration for the treatment of opioid dependence and
  relapse prevention following opioid detoxification, including
  opioid agonists, partial agonists, and antagonists;
               (6)  support efforts to reduce the abuse or misuse of
  addictive prescription medications, including tools used to give
  health care providers information needed to protect the public from
  the harm caused by improper use of those medications;
               (7)  support treatment alternatives that provide both
  psychosocial support and medication-assisted treatments in areas
  with geographical or transportation-related challenges, including
  providing access to mobile health services and telemedicine,
  particularly in rural areas; or
               (8)  further any other purpose related to opioid
  abatement authorized by appropriation.
         Sec. 403.506.  OPIOID ABATEMENT TRUST FUND. (a)  The opioid
  abatement trust fund is a trust fund established outside of the
  state treasury for the purposes of this subchapter that is
  administered by the trust company.
         (b)  The fund consists of:
               (1)  money obtained under a statewide opioid settlement
  agreement and deposited in the fund under Section 403.507; and
               (2)  interest, dividends, and other income of the fund.
         (c)  The trust company shall allocate:
               (1)  to political subdivisions to address
  opioid-related harms in those communities an amount equal to 15
  percent of the total amount of money obtained under a statewide
  opioid settlement agreement and distributed to the fund and the
  account under Section 403.507; and
               (2)  to the council an amount equal to 70 percent of the
  total amount of money obtained under a statewide opioid settlement
  agreement and distributed to the fund and the account under Section
  403.507.
         Sec. 403.507.  DEPOSIT AND ALLOCATION OF SETTLEMENT MONEY;
  EFFECT OF BANKRUPTCY.  (a)  Money obtained under a statewide opioid
  settlement agreement must be deposited as provided by this section
  and further allocated in accordance with the settlement agreement.
         (b)  Of money obtained under a statewide opioid settlement
  agreement:
               (1)  15 percent shall be deposited into the account;
  and
               (2)  85 percent shall be deposited into the fund.
         (c)  For the purposes of a statewide opioid settlement
  agreement in relation to a bankruptcy plan for a released entity,
  money is distributed in accordance with the bankruptcy plan.
         Sec. 403.508.  COUNCIL ALLOCATION OF MONEY. Of the money
  allocated to the council under Section 403.506(c)(2), the council
  shall allocate:
               (1)  one percent to the comptroller for the
  administration of the council;
               (2)  15 percent to hospital districts; and
               (3)  the remaining money based on the opioid abatement
  strategy developed by the council under Section 403.509.
         Sec. 403.509.  COUNCIL-APPROVED OPIOID ABATEMENT STRATEGY.  
  (a)  The council shall determine and approve one or more
  evidence-based opioid abatement strategies for providing money
  under Section 403.508(3).
         (b)  To approve an opioid abatement strategy, at least four
  of the members appointed under Section 403.503(b)(1) and four of
  the members appointed under Sections 403.503(b)(2)-(5) must
  approve the strategy.
         Sec. 403.510.  REPORT. Not later than October 1 of each
  year, the council shall submit a written report to the legislature
  detailing all expenditures made by the council during the preceding
  state fiscal year.
         SECTION 2.  Title 6, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, is
  amended by adding Chapter 150F to read as follows:
  CHAPTER 150F. RELEASE OF CERTAIN CLAIMS BY GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES
         Sec. 150F.001.  CLAIMS RELEASED IN STATEWIDE OPIOID
  SETTLEMENT. (a)  A governmental entity may not bring an action
  asserting a claim that was released under a statewide opioid
  settlement agreement entered into by the attorney general.
         (b)  A court shall dismiss with prejudice a pending action
  asserting a released claim described by Subsection (a) brought by a
  governmental entity.
         SECTION 3.  The individuals responsible for appointing the
  Texas opioid abatement fund council under Section 403.503,
  Government Code, as added by this Act, shall make all appointments
  under that section not later than the 60th day after the effective
  date of this Act.
         SECTION 4.  The comptroller of public accounts is required
  to implement a provision of this Act only if the legislature
  appropriates money specifically for that purpose.  If the
  legislature does not appropriate money specifically for that
  purpose, the comptroller may, but is not required to, implement a
  provision of this Act using other appropriations available for that
  purpose.
         SECTION 5.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
  a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
  provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this
  Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
  Act takes effect September 1, 2021.