When Massachusetts secured more than $900 million through nationwide opioid settlement agreements, it wasn’t just about dollars—it was about lives. For Cambridge, that means $16 million over 15 years, a historic opportunity to transform how the City prevents overdoses, supports recovery, and protects public safety. To date, Cambridge has received $4.7 million, and the impact is already visible on our streets.
Listening First: Community Voices Shape the Plan
The question wasn’t simply how to spend the money—it was how to spend it wisely. Cambridge turned to those who know the crisis best: residents with lived experience. Their insights guided priorities, ensuring resources go where they matter most. Recommendations were vetted and approved by the City Manager’s Substance Use Advisory Committee, a multidisciplinary team charged with advancing harm reduction, coordinating citywide responses, and reducing substance misuse.
Meeting People Where They Are
One of the most powerful initiatives funded so far is the Medical Street Outreach project, a partnership between Bay Cove Human Services and Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA). In 2024, the program added a mobile van—a lifeline on wheels. Staffed by trusted providers, the van delivers health checks, safe injection supplies, Narcan, fentanyl test strips, and basic necessities like food and clothing. It also connects people to shelters, clinics, and treatment programs. Since October 2024, the team has served 442 individuals through more than 1,500 encounters, breaking down barriers and building trust.
Recovery Coaches: Hope Through Experience
In fall 2025, Cambridge introduced recovery coaches at Healthcare for the Homeless and the Community Safety Department. These nonclinical professionals bring something invaluable: lived experience. They engage, educate, and walk alongside individuals on the path to recovery—proof that healing often starts with someone who’s been there.
Safer Streets, Stronger Connections
Discarded syringes pose real risks to public safety. Cambridge’s partnership with the Community Syringe Redemption Program (CSRP) tackles this head-on. Operating from a mobile van, CSRP incentivizes safe disposal and creates a point of contact for referrals to treatment. The results? Over 11,000 syringes collected and multiple treatment referrals—making streets safer while opening doors to care.
Investing in Youth Resilience
Prevention starts early. Abatement funds now support a Youth Engagement Manager at the Cambridge Public Health Department, who works directly with young people to foster resilience and wellbeing. Weekly meetings give youth a voice in shaping programs that matter to them—because building a healthier future begins with listening.
What’s Next
The work is far from over. Plans are underway for additional sharps disposal kiosks and a public health vending machine stocked with free safety and hygiene supplies—Narcan, fentanyl test strips, condoms, hand sanitizer, and menstrual products. These efforts complement existing programs like SafeSpot -- Cambridge’s overdose prevention hotline -- and Naloxboxes in all City buildings.