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Opioid settlement nets $23M for North Carolina | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-07-12 07:01:00


A Pennsylvania-based company, part of Viatris, will pay over $284 million as part of a $720 million opioid settlement distributed among nine states, including North Carolina, California, and New York. North Carolina is set to receive $23 million, with 85% allocated to local governments. The settlement prohibits seven companies from marketing opioids, limits oxycodone pill strengths, and requires monitoring of suspicious orders. Indivior agreed to stop manufacturing and selling opioids for 10 years but can market addiction treatments. Attorney General Jeff Jackson emphasized holding these companies accountable for fueling the opioid crisis and aiding addiction recovery efforts.

(The Center Square) – A Pennsylvania company boasting the reach of 1 billion patients annually and twice consecutively recognized by TIME magazine’s most sustainable companies list is paying nine states more than a quarter-billion dollars over the next years.

The settlement state prosecutors say “worsened the nationwide opioid crisis” will yield $23 million to North Carolina. Mylan, now a part of Viatris, owns a $284,447,916 share of the $720 million going to the Tarheel State, California, Colorado, Illinois, New York, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah and Virginia.

As part of the deal, some states can get free pharmaceutical products instead of cash. Seven companies in the deal are “prohibited from promoting or marketing opioids and opioid products, making or selling any product that contains more than 40 mg of oxycodone per pill, and are required to put in place a monitoring and reporting system for suspicious orders. Indivior has agreed to not manufacture or sell opioid products for the next 10 years, but it will be able to continue marketing and selling medications to treat opioid use disorder.”

North Carolina is sending 85% of the settlements to local governments.

The companies and their amount owed to all states collectively are Mylan (now part of Viatris), $284,447,916 paid over nine years; Hikma, $95,818,293 paid over one to four years; Amneal, $71,751,010 paid over 10 years; Apotex, $63,682,369 paid in a single year; Indivior, $38,022,450 paid over four years; Sun, $30,992,087 paid over one to four years; Alvogen, $18,680,162 paid in a single year; and Zydus, $14,859,220 paid in a single year.

“These companies didn’t do enough to prevent misuse of the addictive opioids they manufactured and helped push us into the nationwide opioid crisis that continues to take lives in North Carolina every day,” said first-term Democratic Attorney General Jeff Jackson. “Today’s settlements hold them accountable for hurting the people of our state and give us resources to help people struggling with addiction.”

The post Opioid settlement nets $23M for North Carolina | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article primarily reports on a legal settlement involving pharmaceutical companies and the opioid crisis without endorsing or criticizing any particular political ideology. It provides factual information about the settlement amounts, participating companies, and the intended use of the funds by state governments. The inclusion of a quote from a Democratic Attorney General is presented as part of reporting on the response rather than promoting a partisan view. The tone remains objective and informative, avoiding emotionally charged or partisan language, which indicates adherence to neutral reporting rather than an ideological stance.

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

NCDEQ denies permit application for company accused of unpermitted mining

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ncnewsline.com – Christine Zhu – 2025-08-28 05:30:00

SUMMARY: The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) denied a mining permit application from Horizon 30 LLC for operations near Poplar in Mitchell County, citing violations of the Mining Act of 1971. Residents expressed concerns about environmental damage along the Nolichucky River caused by unpermitted mining. Horizon 30 had ignored previous cease orders and operated illegally on about 50 acres. A Watauga Superior Court judge issued an injunction in August demanding an immediate halt. DEQ will continue monitoring and a court hearing is scheduled for September 23 to review Horizon 30’s reclamation plan, aiming to protect local watersheds and communities.

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The post NCDEQ denies permit application for company accused of unpermitted mining appeared first on ncnewsline.com

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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Law officers highlight boater safety ahead of holiday weekend: ' Please don't drink and drive'

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www.youtube.com – ABC11 – 2025-08-27 21:43:17


SUMMARY: Law enforcement agencies are emphasizing boater safety at Harris Lake ahead of Labor Day weekend following the recent death of 10-year-old Brooklyn Mae Carroll, who was killed by a suspected drunk boater. The “On the Road, On the Water, Don’t Drink and Drive” campaign, now in its 15th year, aims to promote sober boating and driving to prevent tragedies. Officer Jake Thompson highlighted the devastating impact of distracted or impaired boating. Over a third of boating fatalities involve alcohol. Officials urge everyone to prioritize safety and sobriety, with Brooklyn’s family actively spreading awareness via yard signs and online updates during the holiday weekend.

“Please, if you are listening to this, think before you act, before you get behind the wheel of a car or boat.”

https://abc11.com/post/harris-lake-nc-deadly-boat-accident-law-enforcement-agencies-highlight-boater-safety-ahead-holiday-weekend/17665007/
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Governor Josh Stein launches new task force on energy affordability

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www.youtube.com – WRAL – 2025-08-27 16:17:56


SUMMARY: Governor Josh Stein has launched a bipartisan energy policy task force to address rising power bills in North Carolina amid surging demand from data centers and rapid state growth. The group includes regulators, lawmakers, utilities, major companies like Duke Energy, Amazon, Google, Toyota, and clean energy advocates. Its main goal is to keep energy affordable while balancing costs between households and large industrial users. Stein emphasized learning from other states on cost-sharing for new power infrastructure. The task force also aims to protect economic development, warning that federal clean energy cuts could risk 50,000 jobs and increase bills by up to 18%.

Your power bill could get even higher, and Governor Josh Stein said the state needs to act. On Tuesday, Stein announced a …

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