Colleen Ronnei, who launched a school-based addiction awareness program after her son Luke fatally overdosed at age 20, cleared her schedule when she heard applications for Minnesota's new opioid epidemic response fund were available.
The Chanhassen mom, who founded a nonprofit called Change the Outcome, spent three days and $2,500 to complete a 36-page proposal by the late May deadline. But shortly after submitting the request for $120,000, she got a response that gutted her: The round of grant-making was canceled because of "insufficient funds."
"I was sick," Ronnei said through tears. "It was like, are you kidding me? Three days after the dang thing was due. ... I can't begin to express the disappointment."
Change the Outcome was one of more than two dozen programs that sought but failed to receive funding through Minnesota's landmark Opioid Epidemic Response Law, which in its early going has suffered a revenue shortfall and seen legislators influence the spending of funds raised by fees on drug manufacturers.
Passed in 2019, the program was expected to raise $20 million to fight the opioid crisis through those fees. A 19-member citizen advisory council was established to make recommendations on distributing millions in revenue to addiction treatment and prevention programs.
But the fees have so far fallen $7 million short of projections. That, along with decisions by state legislators, left the council's coffers too depleted to fulfill the council's goal of funding more services.
Twenty-seven applicants, including treatment centers and programs focused on American Indian women, Asian communities and the homeless, were left empty-handed.
Now, just one year after the law took effect, frustrations over communication and accusations of legislative meddling are fueling calls to change the process to ensure the law's original aims are met.