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Colorado to use funding from settlement with e-cigarette manufacturer towards youth mental health services

The exterior of a gray cement building with the words "Denver Public Schools" on it.
Rachel Woolf
/
Chalkbeat Colorado
The exterior of the Denver Public Schools administrative building in Denver. Colorado is using a major share of its 2023 settlement with e-cigarette manufacturer Juul Labs to fund youth mental health and wellness support services. Attorney General Phil Weiser said the state is offering $20 million dollars in grants for school and community partnerships that help decrease youth vaping and build social connections.

Colorado will spend $20 million of a $31.7 million lawsuit settlement with e-cigarette manufacturer Juul Labs Inc. on a grant program aimed at improving youth mental health, state Attorney General Phil Weiser announced Tuesday.

The program will prioritize collaborations between school districts and community organizations. The aim is to address children鈥檚 mental health so they don鈥檛 turn to vaping as a way to cope.

鈥淲hen you think about a challenge like youth vaping, you can think about addressing the symptom 鈥 the fact that people are vaping 鈥 or the underlying cause,鈥 Weiser said in an interview after the announcement. 鈥淲e鈥檝e chosen to address the underlying cause.

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鈥淲e know that because of mental health issues, people turn to substances like vaping. That鈥檚 why we鈥檙e going to the source to ask: How do we build better connections?鈥

The 鈥渉ow鈥 will be up to the school districts, which will be invited to apply for grants later this year. The long lead time is intentional; Weiser said the goal is for districts to collaborate with one another and with local community organizations to come up with programs that help develop young people鈥檚 connections to trusted adults and to one another. Several Colorado foundations have offered to help facilitate those collaborations over the next six months.

鈥淲e do not want to prescribe what you need to do,鈥 Weiser told a room full of educators at a Colorado Education Initiative summer conference, where he made the announcement. 鈥淲e want to offer a broad opportunity around holistic youth mental health and leave it to you to think about what collaboration, what partnership, what strategies make sense in your community.鈥

Colorado sued Juul in 2020, alleging that it targeted youth with deceptive marketing and played down the health risks of vaping. The state was one of several that settled with the company. Juul did not admit to any wrongdoing in the settlement.

Thirty percent of Colorado high school students reported having vaped at least once, according to the , which is administered every other year. Sixteen percent of students said they鈥檇 vaped in the last 30 days.

The $20 million grant program is the largest of three programs that Colorado is spending the Juul settlement money on. The others are a $6 million grant program aimed at nonprofit organizations and government agencies, and an $11.4 million grant program for school districts to address the youth vaping crisis. Those grant programs are already underway, and Weiser said the recipients will be announced soon.

Weiser said he sees the $20 million program as especially impactful because of the power of collaboration. 鈥淪chools are free to work with whoever in their community is serving young people,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n some communities, it might be a Boys and Girls Club. In other communities, it might be a library teaching kids to read.鈥

Grant applicants whose school districts serve a combined 23,000 students or more will be eligible for a $2.5 million grant over a three-year period, Weiser said. Applicants whose districts serve between 7,500 and 23,000 students will be eligible for $1.75 million over three years, and districts that serve fewer than 7,500 students will be eligible for $750,000.

Late last year, Colorado led a coalition of 42 attorneys general nationwide that sued Meta in a similar lawsuit alleging that its social media platforms, including Instagram, used deceptive practices to harm children and teens and addict them to social media.

 is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Colorado. Her work often appears both on-air at 萝莉少女 91.5 FM and online at 萝莉少女.org. Contact Melanie at masmar@chalkbeat.org.

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