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After Your Town Hall Meeting: What Next?

Your community is more aware of underage drinking (UAD) and its consequences as a result of your Town Hall Meeting (THM). Many members of your community feel compelled to take preventive action now. Make sure that your THM has been a catalyst for action by ensuring that this momentum will continue to build and that solutions offered during your THM will be implemented.

Public awareness of UAD is the basis of prevention. Maintaining public awareness after your THM can reinforce the idea that everyone in a community has an essential role in helping young people avoid alcohol. For example, parents can actively discourage alcohol use by their children, and local government agencies can ensure strict compliance checks of alcohol outlets. Strong and continuing public awareness of this issue also can help in changing current social norms that tolerate or even encourage UAD and in securing funding of prevention programs that your community might want to implement after your THM.

Maintain and increase public awareness by working through the media and communication channels that helped to promote your THM. A few suggestions are to:

  • Write a letter to the editor about April being Alcohol Awareness Month and in response to any article about a traffic fatality or juvenile delinquency involving UAD. Include activities that your community is doing or should do to prevent UAD. Use attendance numbers at your THM to demonstrate that UAD is an issue of interest to the community.
  • Encourage local radio and television stations to air the new public service announcements (PSAs) to prevent UAD that the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) created in collaboration with the Ad Council. The objective of the PSAs is to encourage parents to speak with their children about the dangers of UAD.
  • Encourage schools to use their Web sites or newsletters to regularly remind parents about actions they can take to prevent UAD. Schools are more likely to take this action if you supply them with a topical issue; for example, why parents should support alcohol-free after-prom events and graduation parties, and the need for parents to be extra vigilant during summer months, when the largest percentage of young people first try alcohol.
  • Encourage high schools to distribute UAD prevention materials to graduating students and their parents. Examples are Parents: Help Your Teens Party Right at Graduation and What Parents Need to Know About College Drinking, both available through the NIAAA College Drinking—Changing the Culture Web site.

Look beyond the media for additional, long-term, ways to keep UAD in the public eye:

  • Post a billboard or other signage about UAD and its prevention where parents and other community members will see it frequently. Local organizations that helped support your THM also may be willing to fund public signage.
  • Create a speakers bureau of people who can seek out and respond to opportunities to discuss UAD at school and community events throughout the year.
  • Involve your community in selecting and implementing evidence-based programs to prevent UAD, based on community goals and strategies developed during your THM. To help secure program funding, emphasize that UAD prevention programs also can help to prevent negative behaviors associated with early alcohol use (e.g., assaults, drug use, injuries, suicide, violence, and risky sex) and to support positive behaviors (e.g., academic achievement). As a result, UAD prevention programs are an extremely cost-effective way for communities to invest in healthy youth development and well-being.

Descriptions of evidence-based and promising programs to prevent UAD can be found on the Web sites of your State government and on the following Federal Web sites:

Your THM is not meant to be an isolated event or a one-hit wonder, but another step in mobilizing a community around UAD prevention. Build on the momentum for action created by your THM, from maintaining and increasing public awareness to facilitating implementation of evidence-based solutions. Taking both small and big steps after your THM will keep your community moving toward the goal of healthy, alcohol-free youth.