Woman’s Voice: This special program is brought to you by the Lenawee Substance Abuse Prevention Coalition. Guests provide information about upcoming events, resources available, and the many ways to help reduce substance use and promote a healthy Lenawee. Kathy Williams: This is Kathy Williams and with me on tonight’s program is Tim Kelly. Tim wears many hats. He is the director of Cradle to Career Partnership. He is also the Social and Emotional Learning Coordinator at LSID, and for tonight we’re going be talking about hat number three. He is the chair of the LSAPC subcommittee, which is Prevention and Education. Tim, thanks for taking time out of your day. Tim Kelly: It’s great to be here. Kathy Williams: So, we’re going to talk about the Prevention and Education subcommittee for the LSAPC. So one of the goals is to help educate our community, basically. Tim Kelly: Yeah. That is the goal, really, isn’t it? Kathy Williams: Yeah. Tim Kelly: From school age all the way up to the elderly, we all can learn more about preventing substance abuse and things we can do to dispose of our medications. Kathy Williams: Yes. Tim Kelly: That’s really what some of our focus is about. Kathy Williams: By educating all the different age demographics and people of different walks of life, we’re helping them learn more about different kinds of substance abuse, but also about the different partnerships that we have within the community for necessary help. Tim Kelly: Yeah. We have, you know, a very diverse group that’s addressing substance abuse. We have people who are in recovery bring a great deal of information and help in addressing it. We have obviously CMH, Parkside, the hospital, ProMedica, also provides support there, as does the ISD and just a number of community partners that, frankly, whenever you just say, “we need a hand with this,” and they step right up and want to address the issue with us. Kathy Williams: Someone is always there to help no matter, you know, what kind of situation you’re in. So, we want to talk tonight too about the upcoming Drug Take-Back event that’s happening at the end of the month, and we can’t get the word out too early really about that… Tim Kelly: No. Kathy Williams: Because we want people to take time to go through their cupboards and drawers and everything and put together their donations. Tim Kelly: Yeah. We’re, yeah. We need people to get rid of their medications that they’re no longer using, that are expired. You know, it’s a great opportunity on October 29th, between 10:00 and 2:00 PM to come out to ProMedica hospital right around the backside there and drop stuff off. There’ll be signs directing you and picking up something in the way of a little goody bag that will say “thank you” just a little bit for making our community just a little bit safer. Kathy Williams: Exactly. Used to be back in the day that you’d flush things down the toilet or just throw them in the regular trash. And, you know, they really are trying to be a little bit more environmentally concerned by disposing of things properly. And so twice a year this event happens. Tim Kelly: Yep, yep. I’ve been involved the last two years, so this is going on my third year, so to speak. And, it’s been a very good turnout. We’ve typically had over 300 people involved and it really is an opportunity to get rid of things, including sharps, I should have mentioned that. Sharps are something that people seem to have a hard time getting rid of, and obviously we don’t want those things in the trash. We don’t want things flushed down toilets because they can… Maybe you’re aware they can check the chemicals in our wastewater treatment and they know what’s out there in our, into our water systems. Kathy Williams: Right. Tim Kelly: So, we really need to keep that stuff out of the old ways we used to get rid of it. Kathy Williams: Exactly. And this is a national event. It’s put on by the Drug Enforcement Administration. And so everything that’s done on Saturday, October 29th atthe Drug Take-Back event, there are precautions being made. The Sheriff’s Department is there present and it’s pretty tight as far as how everything happens that day. Tim Kelly: Yeah, yeah. There’s a lot of rules and regulations as it requires law enforcement to handle the substances that are disposed of and they, you know, along with some pharmacists from the hospital that help sort them, so that we can kind of tell what’s been disposed of. But yeah, they have a very strict requirements about where things can be disposed of. They have to end at two o’clock. It’s very, very strict. Kathy Williams: It’s hard and fast. Yes, it is. Tim Kelly: Yeah. So they, you know, not only on that day, I should mention that they have their red boxes at a number of law enforcement agencies around the county that if you can’t make it on the 29th, you can take them there. And we really need people to take them whenever they can to law enforcement. Kathy Williams: So Tim, again, we want to remind people that it is Saturday, October 29th. It is at the ProMedica Hickman Hospital. You just follow the signs that say COVID testing, basically to take them around the back and they can get more information about the event and you know, garner some information in general at DrugPreventionLenawee.com. So thanks so much, Tim. Tim Kelly: Right, thanks Kathy. Woman’s Voice: The Lenawee Substance Abuse Prevention Coalition supported by funding from the Health Resources and Services Administration. Thank you for listening. New messages air on the second and fourth Monday each month at 6:15 PM. You can listen to this program as a podcast under the “on air audio” tab on WLEN.com and get more information at DrugPreventionLenawee.com.
