Thursday, March 8, 2012

2012-2013 Empowering Future Leaders Scholarship

The Prince George’s County Drug Policy Coalition, Inc. is pleased to announce the “Empowering Future Leaders Scholarship” for 2012- 2013 academic year. 

The Prince George’s County Drug Policy Coalition, Inc. is a nonprofit organization that promotes policies and laws that embrace the public health nature of drug abuse.  Through our scholarship program, we provide community-based support to families within the county with a focus on students obtaining higher education and living a healthy and drug free life.

The scholarship form can be downloaded by clicking on the link below at:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1y7WwAi6HtKiLWvjtBSwLeOedxBmZNarvgFOfkXqQFgQ/edit
The application forms are due March 28, 2012.  All qualifying applicants will receive a notice of an award.

If you have questions or need additional information, please contact Ms. Cheryl Mines, Chair Scholarship Committee at (301) 792-5706.


Sincerely,

Valencia Campbell, Ph.D.
President

Monday, January 23, 2012

Occupy the Dream: The Mathematics of Racism

Occupy the Dream: The Mathematics of Racism by Russell Simmons and Dylan Ratigan

         As we celebrate the life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr, it appears we are a far less prejudiced country than we once were. Individual expressions of racism are less tolerated than ever, we have an African-American President, and African-Americans are increasingly being accepted into executive suites. Yet when we look closer, we find that Greedy Bastards have rebranded racism and made it acceptable again, by calling it "the war on drugs."

These statistics compiled by New York Times columnist Charles Blow and author Michelle Alexander (author of The New Jim Crow) are mind-blowing.
  • Since 1971, there have been more than 40 million arrests for drug-related offenses. Even though blacks and whites have similar levels of drug use, blacks are ten times as likely to be incarcerated for drug crimes.
  • "There are more blacks under correctional control today -- in prison or jail, on probation or parole -- than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began."
  • "As of 2004, more African American men were disenfranchised (due to felon disenfranchisement laws) than in 1870, the year the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified prohibiting laws that explicitly deny the right to vote on the basis of race."
  • In 2005, 4 out of 5 drug arrests were for possession not trafficking, and 80% of the increase in drug arrests in the 1990s was for marijuana.
  • There are 50,000 arrests for low-level pot possession a year in New York City, representing one out of every seven cases that turn up in criminal courts. Most of these arrested are black and hispanic men.

Why is this happening, when personal prejudice is so much less common, medicinal marijuana initiatives routinely pass around the country, and illicit drug use is accepted enough that Steve Jobs could praise psychedelic drugs as key to his creative success at Apple Computer?
The modern drug war in politics can be traced back to political operative named Clifford White, an advisor to Barry Goldwater, who recognized that there were votes to be had in the backlash against the civil rights movement. From the 1970s to the 1990s, the war on drugs became convenient code for politicians who wanted to appeal to certain working class white voters with coded racist appeals. President Reagan used this political support to escalate the war on drugs.

A Federal law passed in 1986 allowed law enforcement agencies to seize drug money, and use it to supplement their budgets. Grabbing cash connected to drugs meant that police departments could buy more tools and training. Like the fee-for-service model in medicine, that pays doctors for performing procedures, not for making people healthier, the "forfeiture laws" effectively pay the police departments for making busts - not for reducing the drug trade.
In fact, if the war on drugs was ever won, it would be a financial disaster for law enforcement. There's so much dirty money funding law enforcement agencies that now, according to NPR, some police departments have become "addicted to drug money".

The second significant institutional incentive is of more recent origin, though it too has its beginnings in the Reagan era - the development of for-profit prison companies and their vast lobbying and political apparatus.
  • Prisoners now manufacture and assemble products for Microsoft, Starbucks, Victoria's Secret, Boeing, as well as body armor for soldiers and handcuff cases for law enforcement officers.
  • In 2007, taxpayers spent 74 billion on prisons, with the largest percentage increase of prisoners going to for-profit prison companies.

The Justice Policy Institute noted that these companies make more money through longer prison sentences, but you don't need a report from a nonprofit group to know that. Just look at their own investor reports. The Corrections Corporation of America, the largest for-profit prison company in the country, lists as a business risk in its 10K to the SEC "any changes with respect to drugs and controlled substances or illegal immigration could affect the number of persons arrested, convicted, and sentenced, thereby potentially reducing demand for correctional facilities to house them." CCA also told investors it would make less money if there were lower minimum sentences and more eligibility for inmates for early release for good behavior.

Putting people in jail and keeping them there is good for business. So that's what these companies lobby for. According to the Justice Policy Institute, these companies "have contributed $835,514 to federal candidates and over $6 million to state politicians. They have also spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on direct lobbying efforts." They are large donors to state-based think tanks like the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), who market harsh immigration, drug laws, and prison privatization laws to state level politicians around the country. While the rationale is no longer outright bigotry, the net effect, in terms of stripping millions of blacks of political and economic rights, is the same.

This is the face of racism today. It isn't the racist sheriff in Alabama turning hoses and dogs onto protesters, or the all-white development or country club, but the smooth lobbyist and campaign contributor discussing the efficiency of private prison initiatives or the politician too cowardly to act on decriminalizing marijuana for fear of antagonizing a powerful lobby. It's racism, Greedy-Bastards-style.

What's the alternative? David Kennedy, the director of the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, has highlighted a very simple common sense approach known as hotspotting. He advocates for sitting down the gang members that perpetrate most of the violence, police, prosecutors, and community leaders to talk about their shared problems and the consequences of crime. Such an approach has dramatically reduced homicide rates in Boston and Chicago, and across the country. Yet these programs and programs like them with proven success in reducing crime are the first to go on the chopping block, because they don't provide the budgetary incentive that forfeiture laws do.

Today, the march for civil rights isn't about convincing Americans that racism is wrong. It is about getting money out of politics, so that the profit from institutional racism is eliminated. The Supreme Court's decision in Plessy vs. Ferguson saying "separate but equal" has been trumped by the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision, eliminating all restrictions on corporate cash in politics. If we are to honor Dr. King, let us make this our generation's cause. It won't be an easy fight, but as he said, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice."

Occupy the Dream: The Mathematics of Racism

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Congratulations to Judge Arthur Burnett Sr.

  On Friday, November 18, 2011, Judge Arthur Burnett Sr. was awarded the Senator Paul and Mrs. Sheila Wellstone MENTAL HEALTH VISIONARY AWARD 2011 by the Washington Psychiatric Society, the local chapter of the American Psychiatric Society. This honor is bestowed upon an individual for Outstanding Service in Promoting Non-Discrimination toward those suffering from mental illness. The awards reception was held at the J. W. Marriott Hotel at 14th and Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W, Washington DC, and attended by about 60 Psychiatrists and members of their families. We congratulate Judge Burnett for his tireless efforts on behalf of the mental health community in the Washington DC metropolitan area.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Obama pardon seeks to reflect fairer drug policy

Eugenia Marie Jennings has spent nearly a decade behind bars after being convicted in February 2001 of distributing crack cocaine. But the Alton, Illinois resident is slated to come home a few days before Christmas, thanks to President Obama.
On Monday, Obama granted a commutation of sentence to Jennings, an African-American woman who had been sentenced to 22 years in prison. The president ordered that she be released on December 21st, while leaving intact her eight years of supervised release, plus a $1,750 dollar fine.
President Obama also granted pardons to five other individuals, including three convicted of marijuana-related offenses, according to the White House.
"The president concluded that clemency was warranted for these individuals," said a White House source, "because they demonstrated genuine remorse for their crimes and remarkable rehabilitation into law-abiding, productive citizens and active members of their communities."
The timing of the presidential pardons came on the same day that Obama's top drug policy advisor and other officials unveiled new and updated drug policy initiatives at a press briefing in Washington, D.C. On the agenda were such topics as high drug-related incarceration rates and their disproportionate impact on African-Americans and other communities of color.
"The administration wants to take a different approach," said Gil Kerlikowske, a veteran law enforcement officer, who now heads the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. He was joined by his deputy director, Ben Tucker and Redonna Chandler, Ph.D., of the National Institute on Drug Abuse at yesterday's meeting. "We can use the bully pulpit of the White House."
The Obama administration's strategy is based on the premise that America cannot arrest its way out of the nation's drug woes, said officials. Alternative approaches are needed, they insist, to break the cycle of drug use, crime, and incarceration.
For instance, last August, the president signed the Fair Sentencing Act into law. This criminal justice reform dramatically reduced a 100-to-1 sentencing disparity between powder and crack cocaine, which disproportionately affected minorities.
More recently, the administration advocated for -- and the U.S. sentencing commission approved -- the retroactive application of these sentencing guidelines. They became effective in November; it means about 12,000 people may have their sentences reduced.
"Addiction is not a moral failing," said Kerlikowske, who noted that while the president does not favor legalization or decriminalization, he does support "science and research-based" approaches which cite addiction as a chronic disease of the brain -- one that can be prevented and treated via public health interventions. "People can be better."
In the last fiscal year, the Obama administration spent $10.4 billion on drug prevention and treatment programs, versus $9.2 billion on domestic drug enforcement.
The new proposals include the expansion of drug courts, which place non-violent drug offenders into treatment instead of prison; implementing the Second Chance Act (which passed Congress with bipartisan support) and provides varied resources as treatment, mentoring and employment to reduce crime; and efforts like having HUD encourage housing authorities nationwide to lease to offenders returning to the community.
These initiatives make sense, said Sue Rusche, President and CEO of National Families in Action, an Atlanta based advocacy group.
"There's a lot in here that's new and I welcome it," she said. "If we are going to combat drug use among young people and others, there's going to have to be a seismic shift in our thinking."
The ideas come at a time when record numbers of men, women and juveniles are caught in the web of the justice system -- many for drug related offenses.
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, some seven million people in the United States are under the supervision of the state and federal criminal justice system; of these, more than two million are incarcerated.
African-Americans and Hispanics are disproportionately incarcerated for drug offenses, with consistently higher proportions of inmates in state prison who are drug offenders. Indeed, compared to whites, the numbers of black and Latino offenders is about 50 percent higher.
For states and localities across the country, the costs of managing these populations have grown significantly. Between 1988 and 2009, state corrections spending increased from $12 billion to more than $50 billion annually.
The human toll is even more sobering.
Data shows more than half of state and federal inmates used drugs during the month preceding the offense corresponding to their sentence, while nearly one-third of state prisoners and a quarter of federal prisoners used drugs at the time of the offense.
And the officials noted some African-American parents now consider youth drug use a top concern for young people, ranking higher than gun related crimes, school violence, or bullying.
"The problem is everywhere," said Ben Tucker. "It's tearing families apart and places a burden on the justice system."
Alfreda Robinson is president of the National Women's Prison Project, a Maryland based non-profit which helps former female offenders rebuild their lives and those of their families and children. 

"Advocates have been educating folks that this would save millions of dollars," said Robinson. "Treatment will help folks get off drugs while lowering the crime rate. We have to begin helping people and investing in treatment before prison becomes an option.. We cannot continue to lock people up as if that is the answer."

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Promoting Health and Justice Fundraising Dinner October 26, 2011

                                          





                            IMG_8258.jpg image by CJackson623





                          




          

The Seventh National African American Drug Policy Summit

Co-Sponsored by Bowie State University

November 4-5, 2011

Bowie State University

 Bowie, Maryland


Theme: Overcoming the challenges of fiscal austerity to achieve effective solutions to the substance abuse, mental health, and criminal and juvenile justice disparities issues, facing minority Americans in the United States.


Guest Speakers and Panelists

Dr. Winston Price, President National African American Drug Policy Coalition

Dr. D. Elliot Parris, Interim Dean, College of Professional Studies, Bowie State
                                University

Benjamin Tucker, Deputy Director for State, Local and Tribal Affairs,
                               The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy,

Andrew Fois, Managing Director, Communications and Community Outreach,
                               National Crime Prevention Council

Vincent H. Cohen, Jr. Principal, Assistant United States Attorney for the District
                               of Columbia

Avis Buchanan, Director, District of Columbia Public Defender Service

Terrance Walton, Director of Treatment, District of Columbia Pretrial Services
                               Agency

Nadine J. Parker, Director, National Capital Coalition to Prevent
                               Underage Drinking (NCCPUD)

Jesselyn McCurdy, Legislative Counsel, D.C. American Civil Liberties Union

Major General John R. Hawkins, III (Retired) -Assistant Executive Director for
                               Development and Fund Raising

Dr. Valencia Campbell, President, Prince George's County Drug Policy 
                              Coalition, Inc., Affiliate of NAADPC

Honorable J. Patricia Wilson Smoot, U.S. Parole Commissioner

Susan James Andrews, President, Thurgood Marshall Action Coalition, Inc.,

Daryl D. Parks, Esq., President, National Bar Association

Dr. Patricia Newton, President, Black Psychiatrists of America, Inc.



For information about attending, please contact Ms. Rosalee Morris, Summit Conference Coordinator, Howard University School of Law, Center for Drug Abuse Research at 202-806-8600. Additionally, please contact Senior Judge Arthur L. Burnett, Sr. at 202-806-8622 or 202-806-8623 for further details about the Summit Conference. The Early Registration Fee is $225.00 payable on or before October 26, 2011 and thereafter from October 27, 2011 until site of Conference, $260.00. You may request a Registration Form by providing your e-mail address in your call or e-mailing Ms. Morris at rosaleem@gmail.com or Senior Judge Arthur L. Burnett, Sr. at aburnettsr@aol.com. Further information may also be obtained from consulting the recently revised and updated website: http://www.naadpc.org/.






Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Promoting Health and Justice Fundraising Dinner October 26, 2011

Promoting Health and Justice
Fundraising Dinner

On Wednesday, October 26, 2011 The Prince George’s County Drug Policy Coalition, Inc. will hold its first annual Promoting Health and Justice fund raising dinner at the Newton White Mansion. Dr. Lonise Bias, the mother of local basketball star Len Bias will be our featured guest speaker. She is the founder and President of the Len and Jay Bias Foundation, which focuses on helping youth, families and communities navigate the challenges of daily living.  Additionally she has developed the Programs entitled: Abundant Life Resources and A More Excellent Way Community Outreach. These are programs designed to motivate youth and adults to see themselves as change agents helping to empower our communities.  Please visit Dr. Bias’ website at   http://www.lonisebias.org/


Information regarding this very special event will be posted on our website www.pgcdpc.com and tickets may be purchased through our PAY PAL button or checks made payable to PGCDPC, Inc. and mailed via Dr. Valencia Campbell, Post Office Box 442325, Fort Washington, Maryland 20749.

NAADPC Fall Leadership Workshop

 

NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN DRUG POLICY COALITION, INC. Fall   Leadership Workshop Conference



NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN DRUG POLICY COALITION, INC.




FALL LEADERSHIP WORKSHOP CONFERENCE




SEPTEMBER 19-20. 2011



HOWARD UNIVERSITY – BLACKBURN CENTER
















THEME:  FACING THE CHALLENGES OF IMPLEMENTING EFFECTIVE PROGRAMS TO PREVENT AND TO REDUCE  ILLEGAL USAGE OF DRUGS IN A PERIOD OF FISCAL AUSTERITY AND REDUCTION OF FUNDING


 






Tuesday, September 13, 2011

NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN DRUG POLICY COALITION, INC. Fall Leadership Workshop Conference

NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN DRUG POLICY COALITION, INC.



FALL LEADERSHIP WORKSHOP CONFERENCE



SEPTEMBER 19-20. 2011

HOWARD UNIVERSITY – BLACKBURN CENTER





THEME:  FACING THE CHALLENGES OF IMPLEMENTING EFFECTIVE PROGRAMS TO PREVENT AND TO REDUCE  ILLEGAL USAGE OF DRUGS IN A PERIOD OF FISCAL AUSTERITY AND REDUCTION OF FUNDING


Monday, September 19, 2011

8:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m. -   Registration and Continental Breakfast

9:00 a.m. – 9:15 a.m.  -  Welcoming Remarks – Dr. Winston Price, President,
  National African American Drug Policy Coalition, Inc.

  Announcements of Program Format and Administrative Matters                       

  Vice-President of Administration and National
  Executive Director, Senior Judge Arthur L. Burnett, Sr.


9:15 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.   Opening Session

  The Needs of the National Organization for a Flow
of Revenue Income and Employment of a Small Staff

Amending By-Laws to Provide for a Dues Structure for
Member Organizations, Individual Chapters, and Individual
Persons for To Support Office Administrative Purposes


What Services  NAADPC, Inc. Should Render  to Organizational
Members, Chapters and Individual Members – Maintaining an
Updated Website in a State of the Art Manner, Publication of
Quarterly Newsletters, Submission of Timely Alerts to Member
Organizations and to Chapters Requiring Advocacy and Education of the Public on Vital Issues

Moderator:   Dr. Winston Price, President, NAADPC

Panel:   Senior Judge Arthur L. Burnett, Sr., Vice-President
             Dr. Ura Jean Bailey, Secretary-Treasurer
             Judge Martha Lynn Sherrod, Board of Directors Member
             Julius Debro, Board of Directors Member


10:30 a.m. – 10:45 a.m. Coffee Break

10:45 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. 

    Planning and Implementing an Effective Chapter
                                        Program: Serving as an Advisory Group to Local Government
                                        Officials to Treat Addiction and Dependency as a Disease
and Advising of Available Resources in the Community; Providing Speakers In Schools to Deter Drug Usage, including prescription drug abuse, and Prevent Juvenile Delinquency, and Encourage Educational Achievement; and Assisting Churches to have their Leaders Work with Persons Returning to the Community from Prison to Stabilize Them in the Community.

                                       Moderator:   Major General John R. Hawkins, III, Retired,
                                                            Assistant Executive Director for Development
                                                            and Fund Raising

                                       Panel:  Dr. Valencia Campbell, Ph.D., President, Prince George’s
                                       County Drug Policy Coalition, Inc. 

                                       Yvonne Blackmond, President, Detroit African American
                                       Drug Policy Coalition

                                        Frank Lancaster, President, Washington Healthcare
    Empowerment Coalition, Inc.

                                        Honorable Veronica Morgan-Price (Retired Juvenile Court
                                        Judge), President Designee, Prospective Houston, Texas
                                        African American Drug Policy Coalition Chapter


12:30 p.m. -  2:00 p.m.    Luncheon

                                         Speaker:  The Honorable Milton C. Lee, Associate Judge,
                                         Superior Court of the District of Columbia, Presiding
                                         Judge, Fathering Court – “The Concept of the Fathering
                                         Court, Its Operations, and Its Objectives.”
                                        
2: 00 p.m. – 3:30 p. m.     Panel

      Seeking and Implementing a Drug Free Community Grant

                                         Moderator:   Marshella Toldson, Esq. Staff Attorney,
                                                              Center for Drug Abuse Research, Howard
                                                              University and Adviser, NAADPC

                                         Panel:  Nina Harper, Project Director, East Baltimore
                                         Drug Free Community Grant.

                                          Rosalind Parker, Esq., D.C. Ward 8 Drug Free Community
                                          Grant.

                                          Reverend Dr. Stephen Tucker, Project Coordinator, Ward 1
                                          Drug Free Community Grant in Washington, D.C.

                                          Dr. James E. Craigen, Sr., Ph.D., Associate Professor, Howard
                                          University School of Social Work; President, Human Services
                                          Systems Associates;  Advisor on Drug Free Community Grant
                                          Programs  for the City of Baltimore, Maryland.

3:30 p.m. – 3:45 p.m.        Coffee Break

3:45 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.        Dealing with Co-occurring Mental Illness in Persons with
                                           Substance Abuse Issues -  How to Provide Effective
                                           Counseling Services – What is Being Done for Returning
                                           Veterans with Co-occurring Substance Abuse and Mental
                                           Health Conditions.  The Role of Veterans Drug Courts.
 
                                                Moderator:  Dr. Ura Jean Bailey, Ph.D.

                                           Panel:   Dr. William B. Lawson, Chief of Psychiatry
                                           Howard University Hospital

                                           Charles E. Lewis, Social Worker, Former President, D.C.
                                           Mental Health Association

Sean C. Clark,  National Coordinator, Veterans Justice Outreach,  U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Dr. John Allen, VHA Justice Programs, U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs
               

5:00 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.      Networking Reception – Non-alcoholic beverages and light hors     
                                         Hors d’oeuvres

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

8:00 a.m.  – 9:00 a.m.            Continental Breakfast  

9:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.           Implementing An Effective Program to Get Fathers
                                               Involved in the Lives of Their Children, Including
                                               Former Offenders, to Prevent Involvement in Illegal
                                               Drug Activity and Juvenile Delinquent Behavior and Job
                                               Training and Employment for Former Offenders to Give
                                               Them Financial Stability

                                                Moderator:   Franklyn Malone, President & CEO,
                                                The 100 Fathers Inc.

Panel: 

Panel: Dr. Ronald Beavers, CEO, Positive Imagery Foundation, Los Angeles, California, and Co-Chair, Los Angeles Drug Policy Chapter.

                                                Herman David Odom, Former Director, Office of
                                                Ex-Offender Affairs for D.C. Mayor

Theodore Sweet, Esq., Former Deputy Director, Office of
                                                Ex-Offender Affairs for D.C. Mayor 

Susan Hoskins, Executive Director, Coalition on Economic Empowerment, District of Columbia

Kenneth Glover, Human Resources Officer, Miller and
Long Construction Company.

11:00 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.          Break

11:15 a.m. – 12:00 Noon        Shannon Taitt, Staff Administrator, Center for Substance
                                                Abuse Treatment, SAMHSA – The Program Agenda for
                                                CSAT Working With Community Organizations.

12:00 Noon  – 2:00 p.m.        Luncheon

                                               Speaker:   Dr. Jeffrey M. Johnson, President, National
                                               Partnership for Community Leadership (NPCL) (Invited)
                                               The Mission of NPCL and Collaboration with
                                               The 100 Fathers, Inc. and the National African American
                                               Drug Policy Coalition, Inc. on Fatherhood and Re-entry
                                               Issues.

2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.            What Type of Truancy Reduction Programs Can Be
                                               Established and Implemented, and How They Can Reduce
                                               Truancy, Drug Usage and Trafficking and Juvenile
                                               Delinquent Behavior – What Can Be Done for Youth
                                               Who Drop Out of School?

                                                Moderator:  Senior Judge Arthur L. Burnett, Sr.
                                                National Executive Director

                                                Gloria Danziger, Project Director with Baltimore School of                                      Law on the Truancy Reduction Program in Baltimore

Howard Davidson, Staff Director, Commission on Youth-  at-Risk, American Bar Association

Akena Allen, Consultant Adviser on Grants to Deal With
Truancy and School Drop Out Problems; Parent Advocate

3:00 p.m. – 3:15 p.m.             Coffee Break

3:15 p.m.    4:30 p.m.             Extricating Youth from Gangs and Crews – How Can This
                                                Be Done for Youth Coerced to Join Gangs or Crews –
                                                What Resources are Available to Help these Youth?
                                               
                                                Moderator:  Senior Judge Arthur L. Burnett, Sr.,
                                                National Executive Director

Tyrone C. Parker, President & Executive Director , Alliance of Concerned Men, D.C.

                                                Cecilia Thomas, Supervisory Youth Outreach Coordinator,
                                                Roving Leader Program for Teens, D.C. Department of
                                                Parks and Recreation

                                                Reverend Billy H. Stanfield, Jr., Executive Director, New
                                                Vision Youth Services, Baltimore, Maryland

                                                Reverend Adam Hansford, Former Youth Minister
                                                Clarendon United Methodist Church, Arlington, Virginia
                                                and Former Executive Director, Fellowship of Christian
                                                Athletes, Washington, D.C.

4:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.              Closing Speaker:

Dr. Donald Vereen, Former Deputy Director, ONDCP,
The White House; Director, Community Academic Engagement, The Prevention Research Center,
University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann    Arbor, Michigan  -  “The Future of Drug Policy in America and Challenges in Implementation.”


5:00 p.m. – 5:15 p.m.             Closing Remarks  -   Urging Attendees to Communicate
                                                With each other and share their areas of expertise;
                                                To contact National Headquarters for advice and
                                                guidance; and to provide feedback on any of the
                                                issues and problems discussed during this
conference   and  submit proposed solutions
                                                and recommendations for the coming year.

                                                Dr. Winston Price

                                                Senior Judge Arthur L. Burnett, Sr.
                                                National Executive Director