Stateways

StateWays Nov/Dec 2015

StateWays is the only magazine exclusively covering the control state system within the beverage alcohol industry, with annual updates from liquor control commissions and alcohol control boards and yearly fiscal reporting from control jurisdictions

Issue link: http://read.dmtmag.com/i/602469

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 15 of 51

StateWays n www.stateways.com n November/December 2015 16 BEST PRACTICES AWARDS According to Katie Weaks, ABC Education & Prevention, their philosophy is that youth need a safe, alcohol- and drug-free environment to achieve personal success and build strong communities. "As primary influences on their peers, high school stu- dents have the capacity to become positive role models and leaders in the ongoing effort to prevent substance use," Weaks says. "Therefore, our mission is to develop youth peer leadership that fosters substance use preven- tion at the state and local levels." In 1984, a group of individuals from local communities and state government assembled to determine what Vir- ginia could do about high school students' use of alcohol and other drugs. The group agreed that youth need a safe and drug-free environment to achieve personal success and build strong communities, and that as primary influ- ences on their peers, high school students have the capac- ity to become positive role models and leaders to prevent substance use. Thus, YADAPP was formed. YADAPP is a year-long peer leadership program that begins each summer when high schools and community groups around Virginia send teams of four student par- ticipants and one adult sponsor to a four-day conference. "The objective of YADAPP is to broaden partici- pants' knowledge of substance use prevention and help them work as a team to create a plan for their school, to learn leadership skills needed to address common issues among their peers and to net- work and build supportive relationships with youth from across Virginia," Weaks says. Participants work all week long in groups with other schools to brainstorm the is- sues they are facing in their schools, hear speakers on topics that include alcohol and drug trends, strategic planning, media relations and fundraising. This information is then used to formulate a Strategies to Act Now (STAN) Plan. "Participants take their STAN Plans back to their schools and communities to present them to principals and community leaders, and spend the year implementing their STAN Plan with the support of their adult sponsor," Weaks says. Since its inception 31 years ago, more than 10,000 students from 440 Virginia high schools and com- munity organizations have participated in YADAPP and returned home to implement alcohol and drug prevention programs in their communities. "The ultimate goal is that every high school in Virginia will have a strategically planned and peer-led alcohol or drug prevention program in their school each year," Weaks says. "We are working to accomplish this goal by ensuring the highest level of leadership training, development of the most effective STAN Plans possible and tracking the implementation successes and barriers of teams when they return to their schools and communities." PREVENTING IMPAIRED DRIVING Impairing driving is the leading cause of automobile deaths throughout the nation. Virginia ABC is making a concerted effort to educate, monitor and detect the over-service and underage consumption of alcoholic beverages at ABC- licensed, on-premise establishments in the Roanoke and Virginia Beach regions of the Commonwealth, while coor- dinating with local law enforcement's sobriety checkpoints. "Through this initiative we built stronger working relationships with local law enforcement partners and licensees by addressing establishments that might be over serving their patrons and serving to underage in- dividuals during Labor Day and winter holidays," says Joseph Cannon, Virginia ABC special agent in charge and former National Liquor Law Enforcement Associa- tion (NLLEA) president. Thanks to the NLLEA, Virginia ABC's Bureau of Law Enforcement received a grant of more than $20,000 in August 2014. The money was used to implement the "Op- eration: Prevent Impaired Driving" program. Specifically,

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Stateways - StateWays Nov/Dec 2015