*This is an archive page. The links are no longer being updated. 1991.10.01 : Substance Abuse Training Center Contact: Dennis Wynne (301) 443-5276 October 1, 1991 HHS Secretary Louis W. Sullivan, M.D., today announced establishment of a National Volunteer Training Center for Substance Abuse Prevention under a $2.9 million contract awarded to the Super Teams Operating Company of Sayville, N.Y. The center will train volunteers from around the country in effective anti-drug abuse strategies, conveying the very latest information to them about drug abuse prevention methods. Headquarters for the Volunteer Training Center will be in Washington, D.C., with five training sites to be designated in each of the l0 HHS regions to bring the training to the grassroots level. "Approximately 80 million Americans are active volunteers," Dr. Sullivan said. "Through the work of this new center, many of them can now be given the know-how to become successful volunteers in drug abuse prevention programs. Only with the help of volunteer citizens who understand the complex interplay of biological, social, and emotional factors in the etiology of substance abuse can we have the hope of ultimately eliminating every vestige of this epidemic from our land." The Volunteer Training Center will not only provide prevention skills and knowledge to some l,800 to 2,000 individual volunteers in the first year, but also will prepare managers for community prevention programs. "This is America's first national volunteer training center, representing a new initiative in our nation's efforts to fight illegal drugs," said Dr. Herbert Kleber, deputy director for demand reduction at the Office of National Drug Control Policy. He added, "Trained volunteers are crucial to achieving our nation's anti-drug goals. There are many Americans who want to be involved in the drug war, but don't know how to help. This center can provide them with the necessary training and information to help them overcome drug use in their communities." "The insidious nature of substance abuse requires that communities become alarmed by the threat of this problem, recognize the need for change, and mobilize their own resources to rectify the situation," said Elaine Johnson, Ph.D., director of the Office for Substance Abuse Prevention, which is funding the project. "The new training center will help provide the skilled volunteers to make it possible for communities to do so. It also will give prevention training to parents and to members of the religious community, to ensure that the volunteer effort against substance abuse will endure beyond federal participation," she said. The contract awarded to Super (States United by Prevention, Education, and Resources) Teams Operating Company has options for two additional years, for a total federal investment of approximately $9 million to establish a fully operational volunteer training network across the country. The center will offer 60 different prevention courses of one to 10 days duration in the first year, 120 in the second year and 150 in the third year. Super Teams was selected in a competitive contracting process to develop and initially manage the National Volunteer Training Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. It currently operates the Northeast Regional Center for Drug-Free Schools and Communities, a regional training center funded by the U. S. Department of Education. The Office for Substance Abuse Prevention is a component of the Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration in the HHS Public Health Service. ###