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“Melting The Ice-
Fighting Methamphetamine”
A Pre-Recorded Satellite &Webcast Program
Thursday 18 May, 2006
1:00
– 2:00 PM ET
a. Sponsors: This program is made possible through a partnership with the Multijurisdictional Counterdrug Task Force Training (MCTFT) Program at St. Petersburg College and the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America (CADCA), with the technical support of the Satellite Education Network (SEN) at Ft. Lee, VA.
b. Availability: This free, public domain broadcast will be available on the GETN Military/Federal/Warrior digital CDV satellite networks and on C-Band Analog satellite networks. (There is NO KU analog or digital coverage.) Other private and public satellite networks may also carry the program, check with your satellite provider. (Note: This program WILL NOT be available on small digital dish networks such as DirecTV or Echostar systems.)
Will this program be Video streamed: It is anticipated that this program will be available via webcast. Details will be sent in the final coordination message to all registered sites.
c. Target Audience Statement: Primary target audiences for this program will include law enforcement officials, drug prevention specialists, Drug-Free Communities Act grantees, administrators, school drug counselors, high school athletic officials, treatment providers, drug court members, policy makers, business leaders, coalition volunteers, drug demand reduction coordinators, criminal justice professionals, members of the religious community and other community partners who may be interested. This program is also suitable for Public Access television distribution.
d. Program Summary And Objectives: It’s an epidemic… spreading across the country from west to east. If it isn't in your community yet, it will be. Methamphetamine kills people every day and knows no boundaries. Coalitions and concerned citizens everywhere can play a part in slowing down this plague.
During this hour-long broadcast, we’ll hear from law enforcement about the realities of fighting a drug that is “homegrown”--made using over-the-counter cold medicines and household chemicals. The drug is dangerous and so are those who make it. If you come across a lab by accident, the results could be catastrophic. Find out the signs of meth use and meth production so you can help take back your community from this ravaging drug epidemic
We’ll see how community involvement can make a difference. One grassroots program that began in America’s heartland is now a model for the rest of the country. A frontier city of 50,000 people is addressing all facets of the meth problem, from helping drug endangered children to increasing treatment capacity. We'll also discuss how the Montana Meth Project is utilizing alarming ads and the internet, all aimed at keeping teens from trying meth... even once.
Also, hear from a recovering meth addict about her struggle and ultimate triumph over one of the most addicting drugs ever. Together, we can help melt the ice!
Learning Objectives:
- Learn about the scope of the national methamphetamine problem
- Find out why meth is so dangerous to the users, community members, and law enforcement
- See what community groups are doing to fight the problem
- Hear “straight talk” from a former methamphetamine addict
e. Panelists:
Hosted By:
Mary Elizabeth Larson, Vice President, Communications and Membership,
Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America (CADCA).
Content Providers:
Sgt. Jim Wingo, Missouri Highway Patrol - Jim Wingo is presently a Narcotics Investigator with the Missouri State Highway Patrol and has been assigned to the division of drug and crime control since 1989. Wingo has served in law enforcement since 1978, with the last 22 years in the Missouri State Highway Patrol. He has worked in Narcotics since 1989, with emphasis on Clandestine Labs. He began his Clan Lab Enforcement training in 1996, and from 2000-2004, was Clan Lab Training Coordinator for the Missouri State Highway Patrol.
Cristi Cain, State Coordinator for the Kansas Methamphetamine Prevention Project - Cain has worked in communities across Kansas implementing strategies that have proven successful in addressing the meth problem. She has presented and provided trainings at local, state, and national levels and has provided testimony at a Congressional hearing. In March of 2006, Cain received an Office of National Drug Control Policy Director’s Award for Distinguished Service for her dedication and leadership in combating methamphetamine. Cristi received a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Kansas State University. She has received specialized training in methamphetamine addiction, drug endangered children’s issues, and has received clandestine laboratory certification.
Tom Pagel, Chief of Police, Casper, WY - Tom Pagel is a lead player in his city’s efforts to reduce meth use and meth-related problems. Prior to his tenure as the Chief of Police, Pagel served as the director of the state's Division of Criminal Investigation for 12 years. During Pagel’s tenure as director, the DCI team developed the Wyoming Methamphetamine Initiative, and ensured the passage of HB-59, the controlled substance bill. Pagel started with DCI in 1979. He was the 1989 recipient of the Wyoming Peace Officer of the Year Award and the 1999 recipient of the Western Governors’ Association George S. Mickelson Memorial Fellowship. He is the past president of the national alliance of State Drug Enforcement Agencies and the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Program. He has also served as the chairman of the Governor’s Substance Abuse and Violent Crime Advisory Board and the Association of State Criminal Investigative Agencies.
Vicki Sickels, Former Meth Addict, Chemical Dependency Counselor - Vicki Sickels became addicted to methamphetamine in 1988 and finally gained lasting recovery a decade later after receiving long-term residential treatment. She then became certified as a substance abuse counselor and obtained her Master Social Worker License from the University of Iowa. She is currently employed as the chemical dependency counselor for a methamphetamine research program at Iowa Lutheran Hospital in Des Moines and does prevention work for the AIDS Project of Central Iowa.
f. CEUs, CMEs, Certificates: There are no CEUs, CMEs, or completion certificates available for this program.
g. Videotape Availability: You can usually watch any of these programs plus many others from the past via a Webcast if you have hi-speed internet access. See: http://dlnets.com/mctft_webcasts.htm or you can order a tape, however MCTFT has announced a change in their formerly free videotape policy. Depending on the co-sponsor, some tapes are free, some are not. More details here:
http://www.mctft.com/telecasts/past_telecourses.shtml
Note that they usually do not post tape/dvd availability for any given program until several days after its broadcast date. If the program date you are interested in is not posted, please book mark the site and check back in a week or so.
h. Videotape release (if taping from broadcast): This FREE program is unclassified and non-scrambled. There are no copyright restrictions on this program, however it MAY NOT be videotaped and re-broadcast where fees are attached to its showing. No portion of this program may be used for commercial purposes or for-profit purposes without additional permission of the sponsors.
i. Web Site Support: Support materials, if any, are expected to mounted on the Internet to support this program. Final details will be sent via email to registered sites as part of the satellite coordinates message.
j. Satellite Coordinates: If known at the time of your initial registration, a copy of the satellite Coordinates will be returned to you as part of your registration confirmation. A second copy will be sent to all registered sites 5-7 working days prior to the broadcast. This second copy is send in blind group copies of 50 addressees each. We know that some spam and military filters will block this message. So Site coordinators and technicians whose sites are registered and who have not received the coordinates by the Monday preceding the broadcast date should contact our office immediately. Please do not wait until the day before or the day of the program to confirm your coordinates.
k. Registration: All new and returning sites MUST register for this FREE, public domain program to receive the necessary satellite coordinates (C/KU) or illumination authentication (GETN/Warrior dishes) and Site Materials Website. Sites may register at: CounterDrug Registration or by calling Ed Kronholm’s Office, the Satellite Registrations Coordinator, toll free at 877-820-0305 or 888-820-4898.
l. Future Programs: For future information on MCTFT satellite broadcasts (subject to change due to satellite availability and other scheduling issues) please visit this web site: http://www.mctft.com/telecasts/upcoming_telecourses.shtml. (Information changes periodically; please refresh your browser upon each visit.) Additional information may also be posted here: http://www.dlnets.com/mctft.htm.
m. Email Controls: Email from the CounterDrug Listserv may be adjusted (changed, deleted, or added) at this web site: Email Controls.
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