Product Alert: An Impact Evaluation of Underage Drinking Prevention Programs:
This research study examined the effectiveness of four community programs that focused on reducing underage drinking.
Product
Alert: Safe Lanes on Campus:
A Guide for
Preventing Impaired Driving and Underage Drinking.
A Family
Guide to Keeping Youth Mentally Healthy & Drug Free
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). SAMHSA developed this guide to support adults-parents, family members, caregivers,
teachers, and other youth mentors-in their efforts to help children aged 7 to
18 make good decisions, feel safe and protected, and have successful lives. The
ultimate goal is to promote youth mental health and discourage youth drug use.
An
Implementation Guide for Juvenile Holdover Programs: Executive
Summary
The intent of the Executive Summary
is to introduce juvenile holdover programs and the Implementation
Guide for Juvenile Holdover Programs.
An
Implementation Guide for Juvenile Holdover Programs
What is it? Who needs it? What can it do? These questions
are often asked of any new program, and for the purposes
of this manual the questions apply specifically to juvenile
holdover programs. A juvenile holdover program (JHP) is
both an old and a new concept.
Community
How To Guides on Underage Drinking Prevention
Nine guides were developed in partnership with the National
Association of Governors' Highway Safety Representatives
as a part of the Underage Drinking Prevention Project
that was launched in 1995.
Download
Free Collegiate Impaired Driving Prevention Manual
BACCHUS and GAMMA Peer Education Network offers you a comprehensive, year-round
campaign to prevent impaired driving. The That's What Friends Are For, manual & resource
guide provides information and practical steps to implement a campus-wide campaign.
SADD and the Law
SADD and NHTSA have partnered to provide students with a kit containing
information and media tools for students and law enforcement working
together to reduce impaired driving and underage drinking. More than 250
SADD chapters across the nation have already signed on to be a part of the latest
campaign, SADD and the Law. Other organizations are welcome to download
the materials from the SADD web site.
Speak
Out & Make NOYS Project Manual
This project manual acts as a step-by-step project guide.
The first three chapters help you analyze the health and
safety needs of your community, define your project goals,
develop a team, and organize the details of your project.
Sentencing
and Dispositions for Youth DUI and Other Alcohol Offenses.
This guide was developed by an interdisciplinary expert
panel to help judges and prosecutors sanction juveniles
and youth more effectively, and work cooperatively with
administrative agencies and community organizations in an
effort to reduce youth DUI, underage drinking, and other
alcohol-related offenses.
Youth
Fatal Crash and Alcohol Facts, 2000.
The figures and data in this report focus on alcohol-related
fatal crashes involving young people, ages 15 through 20,
from 1982 to 2000. And, falls primarily into four categories:
youth fatalities; young drivers involved in fatal crashes;
young drivers killed and youth fatalities by involvement
of young drivers.
Youth
Impaired Driving Manual for Sheriffs.
Combating underage drinking and driving in rural areas is
a primary emphasis of sheriffs in their effort to protect
the motoring public. By combining many of the proven methods
of enforcement and education approaches with new or different
programs, the desired results can be achieved.
Zero
Tolerance Means Zero Chances.
This activity kit was created with the assistance of the National
Organizations for Youth Safety for use by high school age
youths in an effort to reduce underage drinking and impaired driving
during Spring break, prom and graduation season.
Law
Enforcement Executives Summit on Drugs, Driving and Youth.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the
International Association of Chiefs of Police held a conference
to address youth alcohol, other drugs, and driving. This
is a summary report of the Summit.
Zero
Tolerance Laws
As of February 1998, all but 4 states
had passed zero tolerance laws. These laws make it illegal
per se (in and of itself) for people under 21 to drive with
any measurable blood alcohol content (BAC) in their blood.