“Some of them are living on $1,500 a month,” Lowhorne said. “And that’s not very much money these days when you’re trying to take care of a kid, possibly a baby. And then sometimes we have problems with preemies because they’re born addicted.”
Lowhorne said many of these children have challenges, too. They may have experienced trauma, abuse or neglect.
Madison County, where New Market is located, is set to receive just over $90,000. Each family that is approved will receive a one-time payment of between $1,000-$2,000. Lowhorne said it’s an amount that is not even close to enough, but it “makes a world of a difference” to these grandfamilies.
They can use the money to buy groceries, pay bills, for dental care or to sign the kids up for sports programs to keep them active. It can also be used to go shopping for school uniforms, as Lowhorne did earlier in the day with his granddaughter he and his wife are raising.
“Let me tell you, I learned some things on how to shop with a young, seven-year-old girl,” Lowhorne said with a laugh. “But it was fun. We had a good time. She said it was a daughter-daddy day.”
While the first round of opioid settlement funds is coming in now, there are hundreds of millions more to come in the next decade. Lowhorne hopes that when the state of Alabama sees how much of a need there is for support, they’ll give more of that money to grandfamilies.
“We want other states to follow because other states are just like Alabama,” Lowhorne said. “You’ve got tens of thousands of grandparents who are raising their grandchildren with hardly any help, if any help at all, like in Alabama — they get nothing.”