Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Patricia Todd asked the Kittitas County Board of Commissioners to authorize a commissioner to sign participation forms for settlements tied to opioid manufacturer bankruptcies. "This will allow commissioner signature on all participation forms for the bankruptcy with Purdue and other opioid manufacturers," Todd said during the meeting.
The request was presented as a procedural authorization: no public debate or vote on the substance of any settlement was recorded during the meeting. The transcript does not show a motion, second, or a recorded vote on the request.
Why it matters: local governments commonly must sign participation forms to enroll in multi-jurisdictional settlement processes, which can affect how settlement funds are distributed and which remedies are implemented at the county level. The meeting record does not specify next steps, timelines, or any conditions tied to the authorization.
The agenda move occurred during the commissioners' general consent items; the transcript contains no public comment about the request and no recorded action during the meeting minutes provided.
Forward-looking note: If the board later approves formal participation or distribution agreements, those actions would generate separate agenda items and votes.