About Us

Kid covered in paint and smiling

What We Do

DRUG PREVENTION WORK IN FORSYTH COUNTY. We provide a current community assessment of what is going on in our town. We collaborate with community organizations, professional groups, and interested citizens bring fresh ideas and actions to our community that will better educate, advocate and empower our citizenry to lead healthier lives.

The council develops programs to provide services to the community for drug prevention. Council activities include advocating for changes in laws, creating school programs for youth and parent support, purchasing space for billboards and distributing posters, facilitating educational seminars and events, participating in programs to get drugs off the streets, and more.

Who We Are

We are a continuously growing group of passionate citizens who love Forsyth County. The coalition consists of members from 12 sectors: parents, government leaders, law enforcement, youth-serving organizations, youth, business representatives, religious organizations, substance abuse organizations, healthcare professionals, media, schools, and civic/volunteer groups.

How We Work

We are an all-volunteer organization, except for our Director and part-time Coordinator, consisting of dozens of adult and youth citizens, community leaders, and partnerships. We work toward creating the healthiest possible community by employing strategies to decrease substance abuse and increase the perception of harm. We donate our time, passion, and skills to help in various ways.

We seek more citizens, community leaders, and partner organizations who can join with us and strengthen drug prevention work throughout our county and state. We subscribe to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Strategies Administrations' (SAMHSA) Eight Dimensions of Wellness and utilize the public health methods described below.

Our funding comes from CDC’s Drug-free Community Coalition grant along with matching in-kind and/or financial donations from members of the community and other organizations. Matching our grant funding each year is required to maintain the grant, so your yearly support is critical.


Make a Financial Donation

Please mail your check to:

United Way of Forsyth County
240 Elm Street
Cumming GA 30040

be sure to include "for the Forsyth County Drug Awareness Council" on the note line of your check.

Make an In-Kind Donation

You can contact the Director, Rachel Kayden, at rachel@unitedwayforsyth.com.

To have a healthy substance abuse-free Forsyth County

To educate, advocate, and empower the community to prevent substance abuse across the lifespan in Forsyth County, Georgia.

Strategies

Our data-driven, public health approach to successful community change strategies is based on the SAMHSA Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) to plan, implement, and evaluate prevention practices and programs. The SPF relies on implementing multiple strategies that address the many factors associated with substance misuse in an effort to create an environment that helps people support healthy decision-making.

What is Prevention?

Simply put, drug prevention programs help people to avoid using drugs or developing dependence on them. However, we take a broader view and work to help children, youth, and adults recognize their potential as valuable members of their community.

We recognize that there are a number of factors that put individuals at risk for substance abuse, including biological processes, personality traits, mental health disorders, and family neglect or abuse. In addressing these complex factors, prevention must be based on scientific evidence and proven methods. We adhere to developed standards, guidelines, and tools to support the development of effective prevention that contributes to the engagement of children, young people, and adults with their families, schools, workplaces, and community.


Want to join us? Our general council meetings are held on the first Wednesday of every month from 8:00 a.m. until 9:00 a.m. at the United Way, 240 Elm Street, Cumming GA 30040. Reach out to our Director Rachel Kayden, rachel@unitedwayforsyth.com for additional information.


We use SAMHSA's SPF.

Want to learn more about the Strategic Prevention Framework Model? It consists of the following:

  • Assessment. Collect data to define problems, resources, and readiness within a geographic area to address needs and gaps.
  • Capacity. Mobilize and/or build capacity within a geographic area to address needs.
  • Planning. Developing a comprehensive strategic plan that includes policies, programs and practices created a logical, data-driven plan to address problems identified in the assessment.
  • Implementation. Implement evidence-based prevention programs, policies, and practices.
  • Evaluation. Measure the impact of the SPF and its implemented programs, policies, and practices.

Wonder what Type of Strategies We Use?

Here are seven strategies to affect community change:

  1. Provide information. Educational presentations, workshops or seminars, and data or media presentations (e.g., public service announcements, brochures, billboard campaigns, community meetings, town halls, forums, Web-based communication).
  2. Enhance skills. Workshops, seminars, or activities designed to increase the skills of participants, members, and staff (e.g., training, technical assistance, distance learning, strategic planning retreats, parenting classes, model programs in schools).
  3. Provide support. Creating opportunities to support people to participate in activities that reduce risk or enhance protection (e.g., providing alternative activities, mentoring, referrals for services, support groups, youth clubs, parenting groups, Alcoholics or Narcotics Anonymous).
  4. Enhance access/reduce barriers. Improving systems and processes to increase the ease, ability, and opportunities to utilize systems and services (e.g., access to treatment, childcare, transportation, housing, education, special needs, cultural and language sensitivity).
  5. Change consequences (incentives/disincentives). Increasing or decreasing the probability of specific behavior that reduces risk or enhances protection by altering the consequences for performing that behavior (e.g., increasing publish recognition for desired behavior, individual and business rewards, taxes, citations, fines, revocations/loss of privileges).
  6. Change physical design. Changing the physical design or structure of the environment to reduce risk or enhance protection (e.g., parks, landscapes, signage, lighting, outlet density).
  7. Modify/change policies. Formal change in written procedures, by-laws, proclamations, rules, or laws with written documentation and/or voting procedures (e.g., workplace initiatives, law enforcement procedures, and practices, public policy actions, systems change within government, communities, and organization).

Read more in the Handbook for Community Anti-Drug Coalitions.