Pubdate: Wed, 01 Nov 2006 Source: Athlone Advertiser (Ireland) Copyright: 2006 Athlone Advertiser Contact: http://www.athloneadvertiser.ie/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4335 Author: Maria Daly TASK FORCE TO SPEARHEAD FIGHT AGAINST DRUGS A new drugs task force for the Midlands region will be launched tomorrow [Thursday] by Noel Ahern, TD, Minister of State with responsibility for the National Drug Strategy. This will be the first ever organised plan to tackle substance misuse in the Midlands. The plan will be officially launched in the Tullamore Court Hotel on Thursday November 2. Speaking before the launch of the Midlands Drug Task Force, Mayor of Athlone Town, John Butler, said that it is very important to have a task force in place to tackle the drugs issue and to give support to people coming off drugs. "It is necessary to have this body in place to ensure that all strands of the problem from education to addiction are working together," he said. The task force will progress a range of measures across the four pillars of education/prevention, supply reduction, treatment/rehabilitation, and research. The Midland Regional Drugs Task Force is one of 14 task forces to be set up under the Government's national drugs strategy for 2001 to 2008. The aim of the Midland RDTF is to deliver a more co-ordinated response to tackling the problem of drug misuse. The Midland RDTF was established in 2003 with the guidance and support of the National Drugs Strategy Team with the support of the Department of Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs. The task force for the Midlands will reflect a four county interagency collaboration that includes voluntary organsations, community groups, and specific interest groups. The four counties are Westmeath, Longford, Offaly, and Laois. A comprehensive consultation process was undertaken in the Midlands before the RDTF, working with its co-ordinators, drew up the first Midlands RDTF action plan. This plan was completed during 2005 and submitted to the National Drug Strategy Team and the Department of Community, Rural, and Gaeltacht Affairs for its consideration and approval for Government funding. The plan is not a static document so is subject to changes and alterations made to it by the task force during its lifetime. The first initiative of the taskforce is the small grants scheme, which was advertised in September and is aimed at stimulating activity among the voluntary and community sector across the region to tackle the drugs problem. The scheme has received 40 submissions for a range of groups, from local resident committees to regional voluntary organisations. There were 12 applications through the small grants scheme in Westmeath, five from Longford, 10 from Offaly, and 13 from Laois. The response to the scheme has demonstrated the level of awareness of the community and voluntary sector to the substance misue issue in the region and their willingness to get involved with the taskforce in tackling this issue. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine