Kris Mayes Attorney General
Attorney General Kris Mayes (D-AZ) is steering $10 million in opioid settlement funds toward rural county sheriff's offices, betting that investing in people after they leave jail is one of the most effective ways to address a drug crisis that is only getting worse in the state.
Mayes announced this week that the money, recovered through litigation against opioid manufacturers and distributors, will be divided equally among five counties: Coconino, Mohave, Navajo, Pinal, and Yavapai.
Each sheriff's office will receive $2 million to strengthen programs that help formerly incarcerated people find stability after release.
The investment reflects a growing recognition that jails and prisons have become de facto holding grounds for people struggling with addiction, and that locking people up without addressing underlying substance use problems does little to break the pattern long term.
"The opioid crisis has touched every corner of our state, and breaking the cycle of addiction and incarceration requires real investment in reentry services," Mayes said. "These funds will help county sheriffs expand programs that give Arizonans a real shot at recovery, stability, and a second chance."
The backdrop for the announcement is significant: while overdose deaths have been falling across much of the country, Arizona has moved in the opposite direction, driven largely by fentanyl and synthetic opioids that now account for nearly two-thirds of the state's drug-related fatalities.
The crisis has hit younger residents and Hispanic and Black communities especially hard. Arizona's location along the southern border has also made it a prime target for trafficking, with law enforcement seizing roughly half of all fentanyl pills confiscated nationally.
Each sheriff's office will be required to spend the funds before the close of the state's fiscal year in June 2027 and submit quarterly financial and program updates to the Attorney General's office to ensure accountability.
For the thousands of Arizonans cycling in and out of the state's jails each year, the funding could mean the difference between another relapse and a genuine path forward. Mayes has made clear she views that outcome as worth every dollar.
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