Riverhead Drug Take-Back Drive-Through Event Nets 107 Pounds of Drugs

09/26/2015

Riverhead Drug Take-Back Drive-Through Event Nets 107 Pounds of Drugs

Riverhead, NY – Riverhead Police Department collected 107 pounds of prescription and over-the-counter medications Saturday, 9/26/16, at the Drug Take-Back Drive-Through Event held at Tanger Outlets. This brings the total number of drugs collected to 822 pounds since the permanent drop box was installed at the Riverhead Police Department in August 2014, according to Officer Rick Anderson who is in charge of property and evidence and maintains the collection log. The Riverhead Community Coalition for Safe and Drug-Free Youth coordinated the event with Tanger Outlets, with both providing giveaways for participants. For the second time this year, drive up service was provided for the convenience of residents.

Riverhead Town Supervisor Sean Walter and Councilman John Dunleavy also participated, as well as Thomas Neppell, legislative aide for Assemblyman Anthony Palumbo.

“This was once again a very successful take-back event,” said Kelly Miloski, MPH, community prevention specialist for Riverhead Community Awareness Program, Inc. (CAP). “With the help of the Riverhead Police Department, Tanger Outlets and our Youth Coalition, we were able to remove these drugs from the community and raise awareness about the permanent drug drop box located in the lobby of the police department.” In spite of an ongoing public awareness campaign, many residents are still unaware that there is a permanent drop box available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

“By reducing access to prescription drugs in our community, we have successfully reduced narcotics abuse among 12th grade students from 7.5% in 2008 to 2.1% in 2014,” according to Felicia Scocozza, executive director of Riverhead Community Awareness Program.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), prescription drug abuse is the fastest growing drug problem in the United States, especially among teens; more people die from prescription drug overdoses than from all illegal drugs combined. In fact, prescription drug deaths are now the leading cause of accidental death in the U.S., outnumbering highway traffic fatalities.

The CDC reports that one in five teens have taken prescription drugs without a doctor’s prescription and each day more than 2,000 teens use prescription drugs to get high for the first time. Teens now abuse prescription drugs more than cocaine, heroin, ecstasy and methamphetamine combined. This may be because they don’t see this behavior as risky since medicine is created and tested in a scientific environment, prescribed by doctors, and used by their parents. In most cases prescription medication is easier to obtain than street drugs; the majority of teens get them from family members, friends or in the home. Teens that become addicted to prescription drugs are likely to turn to heroin which is much cheaper to buy on the street.

The Riverhead Community Coalition for Safe and Drug-Free Youth is funded by the White House Office of Drug Control Policy (ONDCP.) Its mission is to engage collaborative partners in the planning, implementation and evaluation of strategies that prevent youth substance use. For more information about the coalition, or to participate, please call Kelly Miloski, Riverhead CAP’s community prevention specialist, at 727-3722.