Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said Thursday his office is sending checks to 850 Ohio public entities as part of the attorney general's $11.5 million settlement to resolve an antitrust lawsuit against Cargill Inc. and Morton Salt Inc. over past rock salt prices.

Entities in 87 Ohio counties will get settlement money.

"When I announced this settlement in June, I indicated my intention to return a significant portion of the money to local agencies and governments that buy rock salt," DeWine said in a release. "We know these agencies stretch public funds and taxpayer dollars as far as possible, and we hope this money will help them make roads safer for the citizens who depend on them."

DeWine's settlement with Cargill and Morton Salt resolved a 2012 lawsuit accusing the companies of dividing up the Ohio rock salt market and agreeing not to compete with each other for public bids during a period ending in 2010, according to the release.

Although Morton and Cargill admitted no wrongdoing, they agreed to pay $11.5 million to resolve the state's case.

Of the total settlement, about $6.8 million was available to local governments. Additional payments were allotted to the state's largest single rock salt purchaser — the Ohio Department of Transportation ($1.7 million), the Ohio Turnpike Commission ($174,435) and, as required by law, the state's antitrust fund.

Over the summer, the attorney general's office encouraged Ohio public entities to submit a claim for a share of the settlement based on the total amount of rock salt they purchased from Cargill and/or Morton between 2008 and 2010, the time frame for which the state could seek recovery in the case.

The office received eligible claims from 848 Ohio public entities, each of which gets a check. Distribution amounts were calculated at a percentage of an entity's total eligible rock salt purchase. To ensure no entity received a just a few dollars, entities were guaranteed at least $500, except for one entity whose total purchase was just $319.