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PREVENTION. PROGRESS. POSSIBILITIES. ANNUAL REPORT 2020
Transcript
Page 1: PREVENTION. PROGRESS. POSSIBILITIES.

PREVENTION. PROGRESS.

POSSIBILITIES.ANNUAL REPORT 2020

Page 2: PREVENTION. PROGRESS. POSSIBILITIES.

Message from the President and CEO ................................. 3Increase Number of Coalitions in the U.S. and Globally .. 4Increase Capacity and Effectiveness of Coalitions

Training Operations ......................................................... 5Partnerships ..................................................................... 6Geographic Health Equity Alliance (GHEA) ..................... 8National Leadership Forum ........................................... 10Mid-Year Training Institute ............................................ 12

Increase Capacity and Effectiveness of Youth and Adult Coalition Leaders and Members

CADCA Community ........................................................ 1422nd Annual Drug-Free Kids Campaign Awards Dinner ....15CADCA Training............................................................... 16National Coalition Academy .......................................... 18

Increase Brand Recognition of CADCA and Our Coalition Model ............................................................ 20Create and Enhance a Powerful, Effective Legislative and Policy Environment ................................. 22Summation ........................................................................... 23About CADCA

Financial ......................................................................... 24Partners .......................................................................... 25CADCA Board of Directors .............................................. 26Coalition Advisory Committee ....................................... 27Executive Team............................................................... 27Future Events ................................................................. 27

TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Dear Friends,

As the COVID-19 pandemic overtook the world this year, our work to prevent substance use and misuse became more vital than ever. During a time of global uncertainty and unrest, CADCA not only maintained our presence, but made significant strides in reducing substance misuse in

communities throughout the world. Our collective efforts have paved the way in the creation of safer, healthier and drug-free communities.

Over the past 28 years, our organization has seen exponential growth and positive sustainable outcomes. We are proud to serve as a resource for education, tools, training, coalition development and best practices in the prevention field. After decades in the substance use and misuse prevention world, we know firsthand that it takes collaborative work from all sectors—law enforcement, medical, scientific, community, state, federal and faith-based leaders—to make an impactful and positive change in our communities.

In the 2020 Annual Report, you will learn about our proudest highlights, accomplishments and results in the past year. These highlights are structured around CADCA’s Five Strategic

MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT AND CEO

Priorities—to increase the number of coalitions in U.S. and globally, increase capacity and effectiveness of coalitions, increase capacity and effectiveness of youth and adult coalitions leaders and members, increase brand recognition of CADCA and our coalition model and create and enhance a powerful, effective legislative and policy environment.

Thanks to the tireless work of our coalitions, community leaders and partners, we have expanded our partnerships with corporate and federal sponsors, made training events accessible to prevention advocates throughout the world by seamlessly pivoting to virtual experiences and provided prevention resources to communities hit hardest by the pandemic. In doing so, we have turned our 2020 theme of “Prevention. Progress. Possibilities.” into a reality.

On behalf of our coalitions, staff and Board of Directors, thank you for supporting CADCA’s mission to build safe, healthy and drug-free communities globally. We couldn’t have done it without you!

Sincerely,

Barrye L. Price, Ph.D. Major General, U.S. Army Retired President and CEO, CADCA

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279new and continuing

DFC grantee coalitions trained by CADCA from

50states and

THREE territories

International

Domestic

MEXICO

PERUBOLIVIA

BRAZIL

KENYA

IRAQ

ALBANIA KYRGYZSTAN

KAZAKHSTAN

TAJIKISTAN

PHILIPPINES

UGANDA

ECUADOR

COSTA RICACAPE

VERDE

MAURITIUS

SOUTH AFRICA

GHANA TOGOSENEGAL

INDONESIA

GUATEMALAHONDURAS

HAITIDOMINICAN REPUBLIC

PARAGUAY URUGUAY

ARGENTINA

305 community coalitions in

28 countries

ESTABLISHED

10national associations

of community coalitions worldwide

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT4

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14,000 adults and youth trained in all 50 states, three territories and Costa Rica

This year, the CADCA Training Committee was formed as a collaborative effort to streamline CADCA’s training processes and core competencies with a vision of creating CADCA’s “Training Center of Excellence.” The goals of the committee are to complete a crosswalk of trainings, define best research and evaluation to further guide CADCA’s curriculum, review core competencies of CADCA’s training model, define and develop best practices for disseminating trainings and maintain fidelity across multiple trainers.

Provided all training sessions during the 3rd National Conference of Community Coalitions in the Philippines with 500 participants from 27 coalitions, in collaboration with the Association of Anti-Drug Abuse Coalitions of the Philippines (AADAC PHL)

Redesigned the Training of Leaders (TOL) and Training of Communities (TOC) curriculums to be delivered as trainer-led and self-guided online courses

regional/national coalition network engagement events held

20

virtual technical assistance sessions held

190country-specific plans developed to migrate from face to face training to distance learning

20meetings held to develop customized, country-specific plans and strategies for comprehensive distance learning

90

60topic-specific webinars conducted

outreach activities conducted in seven languages

360

countries through training and technical assistance21170

REACHED in

COALITIONS270 coalitions trained overall

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COALITIONS

CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 5

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Coalition Development Support (CDS)

770 CDS requests received

962 hours of CDS provided

Outreach

Publications

In July 2020, CADCA launched the latest publication in our Practical Theorist series, Practical Theorist 12: Cannabis, The Current State of Affairs. The National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services supported the production of this publication. CADCA’s latest publication provides substance use and misuse prevention coalitions the information they need to work in the context of today’s environment and prevent cannabis use.

419Practical Theorist 12 downloads

Over

2,500 Primer series requests

861 Practical Theorist 12 hard copy requests

Over

40,000 Primers printed

With funding from the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, CADCA’s Primer series provides coalition leaders, those new to the field of prevention or interested stakeholders with the basic tools needed to start and maintain an effective and sustainable coalition in their community.

Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of AmericaNational Coalition Institute

PRIMER

Describing Your Community, Collecting Data, Analyzing the Issues and Establishing a Road Map for Change

COMMUNITY ASSESSMENT

Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of AmericaNational Coalition Institute

PRIMER

Fostering Long-Term Change to Create Drug-Free Communities

SUSTAINABILITY

Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of AmericaNational Coalition Institute

PRIMER

Setting the Contextfor a Community Coalition Evaluation

EVALUATION

Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of AmericaNational Coalition Institute

PRIMER

Building Membership,Structure and Leadership

CAPACITY

Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of AmericaNational Coalition Institute

PLANNINGPRIMER

Developing the Coalition’s Vision, Mission, Objectives, Strategies and Action Plans (VMOSA)

Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of AmericaNational Coalition Institute

PRIMER

Incorporating Cultural Competence into YourComprehensive Plan

CULTURAL COMPETENCE

Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of AmericaNational Coalition Institute

Community CoalitionsHandbook

PRIMERHANDBOOK

Supported in Part by theNational Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)

12Cannabis

The Current State of Affairs

PRACTICAL THEORIST

3,700 outreach contacts made

7,644 distance learning participants

from 1,530 coalitions

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT6

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2,362 Research Into Action webinar participants from 1,279 coalitions representing all 50 States, D.C., Puerto Rico and eight other countries

Annual Survey

600 Annual Survey respondents

Evaluation

32 Coalition Technical

Support and DEA360 evaluations completed

GOT Outcomes!

The 2020 GOT Outcomes! application process launched Phase One in May and allowed two months for coalitions to work on the required application documents. At the beginning of August, we received NINE applications: FIVE for Coalition of the Year, THREE for Coalition of Excellence and ONE for Coalition in Focus. THREE winners will be recognized at the 2021 National Leadership Forum.

SEVEN Research Into Action webinars

Webinars

21 Total webinars

conducted

14 Webinar

Wednesdays

OVER

6,000 Webinar Wednesday participants

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1. Research Into Action webinar, “Why Point of Sale Matters,” April 2020

2. Research Into Action webinar, “Tobacco Minimum Floor Price Law and Adult Smoking Prevalence,” July 2020

3. “Tobacco Prevention and Control in Rural America,” October 2020

HOSTED TWO LEARNING COLLABORATIVES

1. Tri-Networks HPV Vaccination Learning Collaborative

2. Geographic Surveillance Learning Collaborative

HOSTED THREE TRAININGS

1. Missouri Tobacco Control Policy Training

2. “Policy Change Process Mapping” training session at the Eliminate Tobacco Use Summit 2020

3. Creating Evidence-Based Fact Sheets 1-pager Training

CREATING EVIDENCE-BASED

FACT SHEETS

TAILORING MESSAGES FOR

DECISION MAKERS

September 8, 2020

1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.

Join Zoom

Meeting ID: 992 5467 4086 Passcode: 086341

Phone: 1-312-626-6799 Join the Missouri Tobacco Prevention and Control Program to learn how to create one-page fact sheets for decision makers. This initiative builds off of communications research conducted in 2019 on Missourian’s views and attitudes about smoke-free policies within the state. The template, along with a short instructional guide, will allow users to tailor their messages and build support for a variety of public health issues.

Participants will learn:

• The importance of a one-pager

• Information needed to create a one-pager

• Strategies for building a position for clean indoor air policies and other public health issues

• The importance of framing messages

• Examples of one-pagers

Presented in Partnership by:

HOSTED THREE WEBINARS

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT8

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E-cigarettes: What are They, What are the Health Risks, and What we can do to Protect Youth – Brian King, CDC Office of Smoking

and Health

Coalition Development and Policy Success in Rural Communities – Melanie Dickens, Alabama

Department of Public Health/Smoke-Free Shoals

Working with American Indian/Alaska Natives: Strategies for Success – Joshua Hudson, The National Native

Network

Effective Law & Policy: Incorporating Equity at Every Stage – Natasha Phelps, Public Health Law

Center

Meeting with Policymakers and Influentials– Ellen Nodine and Annie Neimand,

The Center for Public Interest Communication

The Back of the Envelope Guide to Strategy– Ann Christiano and Jack Barry,

The Center for Public Interest Communication

Clearing the Air: A Coalition’s Guide to Going Smokefree– Onjewel Smith, American

Nonsmokers’ Rights (ANR) Foundation

HOSTED FOUR SESSIONS AT THE 2020 NATIONAL LEADERSHIP FORUM

ANDREW ROMERO, M.ED., Director of the Geographic Health Equity Alliance, was accepted and participated in the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)’s Office of Smoking and Health (OSH) 2020 Leadership & Sustainability School. This program cultivated the leadership skills of rising national tobacco control leaders in a small group setting and improved their knowledge and practice of five leadership competencies (equity, systems thinking, collaborative

leadership, communications and policy development and engagement) within the context of leading tobacco control policy, systems and environmental change.

HOSTED THREE SESSIONS AND A MOCK SCHOOL BOARD MEETING AT THE 2020 MID-YEAR TRAINING INSTITUTE

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 9

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National Leadership Forum 2020

349Congressional appointments held

93% of respondents rated the opportunities for networking as “good” or “very good”

96% of respondents rated the opportunities to learn something new as “good” or “very good”

of respondents agreed the National Leadership Forum will positively impact their effectiveness at addressing substance use and misuse prevention in their communities

98%

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT10

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3,237ATTENDEES

74TRAINING SESSIONS

484YOUTH ATTENDEES

OPENING PLENARY KEYNOTE SPEAKERSNora D. Volkow, MD, Director, National Institute on Drug Abuse

YOUTH LEADERSHIP AWARD RECIPIENTDelainey Allen, Action for the Betterment of the Community Coalition, Portland, OR

NATIONAL NEWSMAKER AWARD RECIPIENTLaura Monteverdi, Anchor and Multimedia Journalist, THV11

NATIONAL LEADERSHIP AWARD RECIPIENTMayor Martin J. Walsh, Boston, MA

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 11

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2,961 ATTENDEES

130INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEES

FROM 25 COUNTRIES

Mid-Year Training Institute 2020

354YOUTH ATTENDEES

of respondents reported the Mid-Year Training Institute will increase their effectiveness at addressing substance use and misuse prevention in their communities

of respondents rated the opportunities to learn something new as “good” or “exceptional”

of respondents rated overall quality of presenters as “good” or “exceptional”

of respondents who were previous attendees reported excellent training sessions made them come back this year, and 29% indicated that pivoting to a virtual platform made them come back this year

97% 95% 95% 90%

OPENING PLENARYONDCP TOWN HALL

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT12

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FEATURED SPEAKERS

OPENING PLENARY KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Elinore F. McCance-Katz, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

The Honorable James W. “Jim” Carroll, Director, White House Office of National Drug Control Policy

Debra Houry, M.D., M.P.H., Director, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Anthony “Tony” W. Jackson, Jr., Director of Prevention, Division of Substance Abuse Services, Office of Prevention and Early Intervention Services, Tennessee Department of Mental Health & Substance Abuse Services

Bertha K. Madras, Ph.D., Professor of Psychobiology, Harvard Medical School

RADM Erica G. Schwartz, M.D., J.D., M.P.H., Deputy United States Surgeon General

Timothy J. Shea, Acting Administrator, Drug Enforcement Administration

Nora D. Volkow, M.D., Director, National Institute on Drug Abuse

Mayor Martin J. Walsh, Boston, MA

SIMULTANEOUS INTERPRETATION for sessions offered in Spanish, French and Russian

11 REPRESENTATIVES from the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), U.S. Department of State, and offices from Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Philippines, Indonesia and Kazakhstan

Months before our 19th Annual Mid-Year Training Institute was set to take place at the Gaylord Opryland Hotel in Nashville, TN, the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a rapid transition to a virtual event. The 2020 Mid-Year was CADCA’s first-ever entirely virtual signature training event.

85 TRAINING SESSIONS in four languages

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 13

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Members-Only CADCA Community

MOST POPULAR LIBRARY ITEMS:

– Take Out Stickers – Loyd Platson

– Sticker Shock Campaigns – Emma Beall

– In-Kind Match During COVID – Cassandra Robledo

MOST POPULAR POSTS:

– Facebook Campaigns – Ulanda Hinkston

– Lock up Substance at Home – Cindy Hayford

– Social Media Content Calendar – Nicole Hackley

13,000+MEMBERS HAVE JOINED OUR SIGNATURE DISCUSSION FORUM

5,300+ DISCUSSION POSTS LIBRARY ITEMS

468

community.cadca.org

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT14

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DFKC Awards

Humanitarian of the Year: Rx Abuse Leadership Initiative

Champion for Drug-Free Kids: Larry P. Cote, Esquire, Founding Partner, Cote Law PLLC

Master of Ceremonies: Anita Brikman, Senior Vice President, Communications & Public Affairs, Consumer Healthcare Products Association

Chair: Jim Frates, Chief Financial Officer, Alkermes

Vice-Chair: Jason Sundby, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Verde Technologies

Musical Performance: Sean Ardoin

Invocation: Reverend Richard A. Henderson

Congressional Special Guest: The Honorable Roy Blunt (R-MO)

Youth Speakers: Andrea and Angela Ventura, United Way’s Broward Youth Coalition, Chase Taylor, Montcalm Youth Wellness Committee

Congressional Host Committee members

Leadership Team members

CADCA’s 22nd Annual Drug-Free Kids Campaign Awards were hosted as a livestream virtual event, allowing prevention advocates from across the world to celebrate the successes of the 2020 Drug-Free Kids Campaign in real time.

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 15

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International Trainings

4,000 coalition members and partners reached around the world virtually

11,350 coalition volunteers trained by CADCA

Domestic Trainings

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36 one-on-one coalition consultations completed with members and leaders online

8,407 adults trained from

679 adult-led coalitions

3,641 youth coalition leaders trained from

270 youth coalitions

DEA 360 Program:

405 adults and

703 youth trained

fouradult trainings,

five youth trainings and

one Youth Summit conducted

CADCA ANNUAL REPORT16

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CADCA Youth Leadership Initiative (CYLI) Trainings

Costa Rica Costa Rica

Boston

Knoxville

3,641 youth trained from 21 states, one territory and Costa Rica

270 adult advisors trainedfrom 13 states

16 CYLI trainings

158 hours of CYLI trainings

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 17

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# Chairman’s Awards applicants (TOPS)

309 336 27 18 17NCA attendees from 131 coalitions participated in the 2020 NCAs

Prevention advocates from 148 coalitions graduated from the NCA at the 2020 National Leadership Forum

NCA reinforcement webinars conducted

Supplemental webinars conducted

Chairman’s Award applicants

National Coalition Academy

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# Chairman’s Awards applicants (TOPS)

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Beyond the NCA is an emerging CADCA initiative designed to assist coalitions once they complete the NCA to effectively implement the lessons learned. Several coalitions are currently utilizing this initiative to remain engaged with the CADCA team as they use data and environmental strategies to affect change in their communities to achieve population-level outcomes. CADCA plans to continue this initiative to empower more coalitions through the process of implementing the CADCA Model of Community Change.

The NCA curriculum is currently being revised to incorporate academic rigor in the instructional design process and include the most recent prevention

science research. This process will include the feedback from several academic institutions, the NCA trainers and participants to ensure relevance and efficacy.

CADCA’s 2020 National Coalition Academy (NCA) began as a synchronous live training. After the completion of three cohorts, the COVID-19 pandemic struck and the NCA pivoted to a virtual format for the remainder of the year. The pivot to virtual NCA required the CADCA team to innovate and collaborate to create a training that was engaging for coalition participants. The virtual NCAs were very successful and, based upon the evaluations received, participants felt the virtual NCAs provided an experiential transfer of knowledge that was empowering to their work.

CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 19

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CADCA Model for Community Change

This year, CADCA’s Model for Community Change was presented during an official side event at the 63rd Session of the United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs and an Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe conference on “Strengthening Effective Prevention of Drug Use Among Youth Through Community Policing.” In addition, four webinars featuring CADCA’s Model were made available on the International Society of Substance Use Treatment and Prevention Professionals website in Spanish, Russian, Portuguese and English.

To date, five national governments have utilized CADCA’s Model in their national drug control strategy.

Improve Population Level

Outcomes

CADCA Training and Coalition Development

Technical Assistance

Create Community

Change

Establish Coalition

& Enhance Capacity

Coalitions Pursue

Comprehensive Strategies

Coalitions Implement

Essential Processes

CADCA’s MODEL FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE

1. Providing Information2. Enhancing Skills3. Providing Support

4. Enhancing Access/Reducing Barriers5. Changing Consequences6. Physical Design7. Modifying/Changing Policies

INDIVIDUAL

ENVIRONMENTAL

CADCA’S SEVEN STRATEGIES for Community Change

CADCA’s Model for Community Change is a data driven, community-led problem-solving process. Using the Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) as its foundation, CADCA’s Model puts the SPF into action by implementing CADCA’s Seven Strategies for Community Change along with other key practices.

CADCA’s Coalition Skills and Processes for the Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF)

BUILD COALITION CAPACITY– Build Coalition Membership– Develop Coalition Structure– Cultivate Leadership– Identify Training Opportunities

Capacity

PlanningSTRATEGIC & ACTION PLANNING– Create a Vision & Mission– Write “SMART” Objectrves– Plan Comprehensive

Strategies for Prioritized Local Conditions

– Develop Action Plans for Each Substance’s Prioritized Local Conditions and Strategies

SUSTAINABILITY– Engage Volunteers and

Partners– Build a Credible

Process – Ensure Relevancy– Create a Sustainability

Plan

CULTURAL COMPETENCE– Commit to Cultural

Competence – Identify Culture & Diversity in

the Community– Build a Credible Process

Community Throughout the SPF

– Recruit Members to Represent the Culture and Diversity of the Community

IMPLEMENTATION– Prioritize Strategies & Action Plans– Obtain Resources– Implement Action Plans– Ensure Implementation Fidelity

ImplementationEVALUATION– Confirm Data on the

Logic Model– Document Your Coalition’s Work– Tell Your Coalition’s Story– Develop Data Collection Plan

Evaluation

AssessmentCOMMUNITY ASSESSMENT– Define & Describe the Community– Collect Needs & Resource Data– Conduct a Problem Analysis for

Each Substance– Create a Logic Model for Each

Substance– Update Community Assessment

as Needed

Sustainability & Cultural Competence

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LCADCA ANNUAL REPORT20

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Email subscribers

16.3%

states with email subscribers

50Video views in 2020

14,000+

Videos created in 2020

95Countries with

email subscribers

31

Change in email open rates

11.9%

Marketing & Communications

Percent increase in followers on:

3.9% 21.3% 10.1% 3.2%

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT 21

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DFKC Virtual Awards266 members of Congress signed

on to the Congressional Host Committee for the Drug-Free Kids

Campaign LiveStream Virtual Awards.

National Leadership Forum

In February 2020, a record 1,300 people from 380 coalitions attended 349 Hill meetings as part of Capitol Hill Day.

Other Public Policy Successes

CADCA supported Rep. Rouda’s (D-CA-48th) and Rep. Budd’s

(R-NC-13th) “Drug-Free Communities Pandemic Relief

Act” which allows ONDCP to waive matching requirements for the DFC program due to COVID-19

issues.

The DFC program and High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) program stayed in the Office of National Drug Control

Policy (ONDCP).

The Sober Truth on Preventing Underage Drinking (STOP)

Act enhancement grants were increased in FY 2020 by

$1 MILLION, from $6 million to $7 million, which will allow an additional 20 grants to be

funded.

The Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to

Treatment Program (SBIRT) in SAMHSA’s Center for Substance

Abuse Treatment (CSAT) was fully funded at $30 MILLION

in FY 2020, despite being proposed for elimination in

the President’s FY 2020 budget request.

FY 2020 Appropriations

The Drug Free Communities (DFC) program was funded in

Fiscal Year (FY) 2020 at a record high level of $101.25 MILLION, to include $2.5 MILLION for the National Community Anti-Drug

Coalition Institute, a grant to CADCA to provide the Technical Assistance and Training for the

DFC program.

The Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA)

enhancement grants were funded at $4 MILLION, $1 million above the FY 2019

appropriated level of $3 million. This will allow an additional

18 grants to be funded.

SAMHSA’s Center for Substance Abuse Prevention

(CSAP) was fully funded at $206.5 MILLION in FY 2020,

despite being slated for a $100 million cut in the President’s FY

2020 Budget Request.

The CDC’s Excessive Alcohol Use program was funded at

$4 MILLION in FY 2020, despite being slated for elimination in the President’s FY 2020 Budget

Request.

The State Department’s International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Demand

Reduction (INL) program was funded at $15 MILLION in FY 2020, despite being proposed

for a $7 million cut in the President’s FY 2020 budget

request.

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CADCA ANNUAL REPORT22

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SummationCADCA’s mission is to strengthen the capacity of community coalitions

to create and maintain safe, healthy and drug-free communities globally

THANK YOU FOR YOUR PART IN MAKING THIS HAPPEN IN 2020

COALITION STRENGTHENING

PARTNERSHIPS AND POLICY

GLOBAL GROWTH

INNOVATION

Over

14,000 adult and youth coalition members trained

148 coalitions graduated

from NCA

3,700 outreach contacts made

1,280 Practical Theorist 12 hard copy requests and downloads

4,000 coalition members and

partners reached around the world virtually 11,350

coalition volunteers trained by CADCA

Reached

170 coalitions in

21 countries through

training and technical assistance

Email open rates increased by

12.7% 12,000+ members of CADCA

Community

DFC program funding increased to $101.25

MILLION – the highest level ever

appropriated for this program

Comprehensive Addiction and

Recovery Act (CARA) enhancement grants

were funded at $4 MILLION, $1 million

above the FY 2019 appropriated level

Over 1,300 people from 380 coalitions participated

in Capitol Hill Day at the National Leadership Forum Signature training events

including the National Coalition Academy, Mid-Year Training Institute and Drug-Free Kids Campaign Awards pivoted to virtual experiences

57 webinars conducted

95 original, CADCA-

branded videos created

14,000+ CADCA video views

A total of 266 members of Congress signed on to the Congressional Host Committee

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REVENUE EXPENSES

Membership Dues

3%

Training & Technical Assistance

37%International Programs

18%

Forum & Mid-Year Training

24%

Communications

8% Fundraising

5%Public Policy

6%Membership

2%

FINANCIALS

Grants and Contracts

48%Sponsorships & Contributions

22%

Forum & Mid-Year Training

27%

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PREMIERConsumer Healthcare Products Association NIAAAPLATINUMAlkermesGaylord National IMN SolutionsIndiviorMallinckrodtNABCA NIDA GOLDCote Law PLLC Emergent BioSolutionsHeidrick & Struggles The Ina Kay FoundationKDHRC BAV/JSAV Show and Event ServicesGreenwich BiosciencesSILVERAuburn Pharmaceutical

BRONZEComcast General Barrye & Dr. Tracy PriceNational Basketball Association The Riordan FoundationCenterview PartnersPacira Biosciences, Inc. Innovation HealthISA/Pride SurveysDonald and Beverly TruslowNFL FoundationAetnaRobert Wood Johnson Special Contribution

Fund of the Princeton Area Community Foundation

Strategic Resources Inc.Faegre Drinker ConsultingSunTrust FoundationGeneral & Mrs. Arthur T. Dean

PRESENTINGPARTNERS

BENEFACTORChief Warrant Officer (CW5) John L. Harrison,

Sr., U.S. Army, Retired OptumserveThau Family TrustJanice and Mark Gold The Honorable Mary Bono and Rear Admiral Steve Oswald,

USN (Ret.), NASA Astronaut Joel PagliarelloDr. and Mrs. Albert TerillionResponsibility.org Dr. Karen and Andrew Drexler Christine and James Borger Montana Institute Neil Austrian, Former Chairman & CEO, Office Depot, Inc.

and former President, The National Football League NIMCO National Community Pharmacists Association (NCPA)Speranza Therapeutics Caron Treatment CentersThomas J. ReddinWholefoods

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Our Team

A

CADCA Board of Directors

ARTHUR T. DEANExecutive Chairman, CADCAMajor General, U.S. Army, Retired

THE HONORABLE MARY BONOBoard Chairman-ElectFormer Member of U.S. Congress(1998-2013)Integritas by Bono LLC,President and Founder

GREGORY PUCKETTBoard SecretaryCounty Commissioner,Mercer County, West VirginiaExecutive Director, CommunityConnections, Inc.

DONALD K. TRUSLOWBoard TreasurerExecutive Vice President,South State Bank

Emeritus MemberNEIL AUSTRIANFormer Chairman and CEO,Office Depot, Inc.and former President, The NFL

Board Members

ESTHER T. BENJAMINChief Executive Officer and Executive DirectorWorld Education Services, Inc.

MICHAEL A. BRAUNPresident, SAVA Workforce Solutions, LLC

LARRY P. COTE, ESQUIREFounding Partner, Cote Law PLLC

KAREN DREXLER, M.D.Associate Professor, Department of Psychiatryand Behavioral SciencesEmory University School of Medicine

FRAN FLENERFormer Arkansas Drug Director

JAMES J. (JAY) GALEOTA, JR.Former President and Chief Executive OfficerInheris BioPharma, Inc.

MARK S. GOLD, M.D.Professor, Distinguished Professor, EminentScholar, Chief Chairman, Emeritus EminentScholar & Distinguished Alumni Professor(1990-2015); Professor (Adjunct), WashingtonUniversity in St. Louis, School of Medicine

LIEUTENANT GENERAL (RET.) PATTY HOROHOChief Executive Officer, OptumServe43rd Army Surgeon General

CURTIS HOUGLANDFounder, The Social Good

THE HONORABLE MICHAEL J. KRAMERJudge, Noble Circuit Court33rd Judicial Circuit of IndianaChair, Drug-Free Noble County

KIRK R. LANEArkansas Drug Director

CHET D. LINTONChief Executive Officer, AEGIX Global

WILLIE A. MITCHELLPresident/Interim Executive DirectorSan Antonio Fighting Back, Inc.

BRIGITTE NETTESHEIMPresident, Territory Leader, North CentralTerritory & Joint Venture MarketsAetna, Chicago

THOMAS J. REDDINManaging Partner, Red Dog Ventures, LLC

RONALD S. ROCHON, PH.D.President, University of Southern Indiana

NATHANIEL J. SUTTONManaging Director, ZRG Partners, LLC

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A

Coalition Advisory Committee

VIRGIL BOYSAW, JR.Cecil County Drug Free Coordinator Cecil County Health Department

SAM BRADSHAW, BSW, CPS/ICPSProject Director, Cherokee National Behavioral Health Prevention, SAMHSA PFS-SPF Project Director

REV. SHANE BRITTFounder and Executive Director The Scottsville Allen County Faith Coalition, Inc.

JORDAN S. ESSERCommunity Initiatives Coordinator DuPage County Health Department

MERILEE FOWLERExecutive Director, MATFORCE and Community Counts

AMY R.H. HASKINS, M.A.Administrator & Sanitarian, Jackson County Health DepartmentProject Director, Jackson County Anti-Drug Coalitions, Drug Free Communities Grantee

CINDY C. HAYFORDDirector, Deerfield Valley Community Partnership

MICHAEL J. NOZILE, SR., MPACEO/Executive DirectorGang Alternative, Inc.

JOSÉ D. PIETRIProject Director, Coalition for the Management and Prevention of Substance Abuse Sabana Grande (COMPASS)

KASEY STREY, ACPSOpioid Prevention Lead, SPF-RxProject Director & NASADAD PreventionCoordinator for TexasTexas Health & Human ServicesCommission

GAIL M. TAYLOR, M.EDDirector, Behavioral Health Wellness, Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services

Executive Team

BARRYE L. PRICE, PH.D.President & CEO

JAMES BORGERVice President and CFO

PAT CASTILLO, B.A., EMPAVice President of Training Operations & Director, National Coalition Institute

JOHN L. HARRISON, SR., D.M., SPHRSpecial Assistant to CADCA Leadership

RAIKO MENDOZA, MBAVice President, Business Development and Membership

ERIC SIERVO, M.ED.Vice President, International Programs

ANGELIQUE WILKINSVice President, Communications and Meetings

February 1-4National Leadership Forum

July 11-1520th Annual Mid-Year Training InstituteHilton Chicago, Chicago, IL

October 1423rd Annual Drug-Free Kids Campaign Awards DinnerRiverview Ballroom, Gaylord National HotelNational Harbor, MD

Future CADCA Events

2021

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CADCA

CADCA

CADCACoalitions

CADCAorg

CADCA

community.cadca.org


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