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Travis County Texas Attorney's Office & The Underage Drinking Prevention Program
Gloria Souhami, Program Director 314 West 11th St., 3rd Floor Austin, Texas 78701 (512) 854-4229
The mission of the Travis County Underage Drinking Prevention task force is to create a community consensus that underage drinking is illegal, unhealthy, and unacceptable. The task force is comprised of social service, law enforcement, and other agencies and individuals, including TxDOT, Mothers Against Drunk Driving, the Travis County Sheriff's Office, the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission(TABC,APD, area school districts, local colleges and universities, and health care providers. Meetings are held on a regular basis.
The UDPP works to:
Identify the link between underage drinking with more highly visible social issues in addition to drinking and driving such as truancy, binge drinking, unplanned/unwanted sexual encounters, teen pregnancy, fetal alcohol syndrome, HIV exposure, gang/juvenile crime, poor academic performance and alcohol poisoning
Develop public education programs serving teens and "tweens" for Travis County schools and other youth venues
Increase community awareness of the Zero Tolerance Law and deter the social availability of alcohol obtained through family, friends, parties and strangers.
Classroom Resources presentations for tweens (middle school age children) presentations for teens (high school age)
The Problem Adolescents under the influence of alcohol are apt to act impulsively. With their inhibitions loosened, they take risks they ordinarily wouldn't consider; binge drinking themselves into comas, swimming across lakes in the middle of the night or seducing a stranger. All too often, the result is tragic. If they cause drunk driving crashes, others may also be killed. While gains have been made, in alcohol-related statistics regarding youth under the legal age, drivers under age 21 continue to be over-represented in crashes. In Travis County in 1998 147 drinking drivers involved in crashes were under 21.* Ten were involved in fatal or incapacitating crashes. Alcohol was a factor in 55 % of all Austin traffic fatalities from 1995-1999.
The Numbers Alcohol continues to be the most widely used substance among Texas students with 71% reporting they had used alcohol at some point in their lives. Average age of first use is 13. One in four seniors said they had driven a car after having a good bit to drink at least once during the past year, according to the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse Statewide 2000 School Survey. Locally, the Austin Independent School District's Recent Use 2000 Survey reports 31% of 6 graders, 74% reported that their parents strongly disapprove of underage drinking; that rate, however, fell to 54% among seniors. In 1999, the TABC issued close to 500 citations in Travis County for zero tolerance law violations, including Minor in Possession and misrepresentation of age. The Boston University School of Public Health reports that every 0.02 increase in blood alcohol levels in minors doubles their risk of being injured in a drunken driving accident. Alcohol-related driving crashes, violence, and suicide are the three greatest causes of death among American youth, and Texas leads the nation in the number of youth fatalities in alcohol related crashes (NHTSA). In 1999, 49.3%of all traffic deaths in Texas were alcohol-related (NHTSA). The UDPP expects to make a significant contribution in saving the lives of teenagers by discouraging underage drinking consumption.
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