FIND
Locate allocations, allowable uses, distribution rules, and reporting requirements across state and local channels.
DOMAIN / PUBLIC HEALTH
Settlement funds, grants, and the channels that distribute them, found, verified, and productized with every fact pinned to its government source.
What lives here
Opioid settlement allocations across state, county, and city channels, approved abatement uses, distribution rules, settlement council structures, reporting requirements, and public health grants.
Public health is where large, multi-year funds flow through many hands before they reach a program. The national opioid settlements are the clearest example: states, counties, and cities expect to receive more than $50 billion in payments through 2040, and the master settlement requires the large majority of the funds to be spent on strategies that abate the opioid crisis.
The data is hard because the rules sit in many places. How dollars split between state and local governments varies by state and by settlement agreement. Each jurisdiction sets its own decision-making structure, its own approved uses, and its own reporting. For a provider, advisor, or operator trying to access or account for these funds, the answer to a simple question (who controls this money and what can it pay for) is spread across dozens of documents. VerisGov pins each piece to its source.
Proven in production
VerisGov already runs a dedicated navigator for a federal health program, with per-state detail pinned to its government source. The same method maps settlement funds across state and local channels. See the RHTP Navigator as a working example of a fully built program navigator.
FIND
Locate allocations, allowable uses, distribution rules, and reporting requirements across state and local channels.
VERIFY
Pin every allocation and allowable use to its primary source so an accounting holds up under audit.
PRODUCTIZE
Turn the verified corpus into a navigator, dashboard, report, dataset, or build. See what you can build.
Answers
This domain covers settlement fund allocations across state, county, and city channels, the approved abatement uses that govern spending, distribution rules and splits between government layers, settlement council structures, reporting requirements, and public health grants. The national opioid settlements are the clearest example, with states, counties, and cities expecting more than $50 billion in payments through 2040.
Coverage anchors to the settlement channels themselves: state attorney general agreements, state and local settlement councils, and the distribution and reporting structures each jurisdiction sets. Every allocation and allowable use is pinned to the agreement or jurisdiction document that controls it.
Settlement splits, approved uses, and reporting rules vary by state and by agreement and are set by each jurisdiction on its own schedule. The corpus tracks allocations, allowable uses, and council decisions as they are published, each carrying its source so an accounting holds up under audit.
VerisGov finds allocations, allowable uses, and distribution rules across state and local channels, verifies each against its primary source, then productizes the corpus into a navigator, dashboard, report, or dataset. The RHTP Navigator at rhtpnavigator.com is a working example of the same source-pinned, state-by-state approach.