Delaware 2023-2024 Regular Session

Delaware Senate Bill SCR200 Latest Draft

Bill / Draft Version

                            SPONSOR:      Sen. Richardson & Rep. Dukes       Sens. Hocker, Lawson; Reps. Gray, Hilovsky, D. Short, Michael Smith, Yearick           DELAWARE STATE SENATE   152nd GENERAL ASSEMBLY       SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 200       REQUESTING A REPORT FROM THE DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO FOLLOW UP ON THE RECOMMENDATIONS CONTAINED IN THE 154-PAGE DELAWARE DRUG PREVENTION CURRICULUM TASK FORCE REPORT.      

     

     SPONSOR:      Sen. Richardson & Rep. Dukes       Sens. Hocker, Lawson; Reps. Gray, Hilovsky, D. Short, Michael Smith, Yearick     

SPONSOR: Sen. Richardson & Rep. Dukes
Sens. Hocker, Lawson; Reps. Gray, Hilovsky, D. Short, Michael Smith, Yearick

 SPONSOR:  

 Sen. Richardson & Rep. Dukes 

 Sens. Hocker, Lawson; Reps. Gray, Hilovsky, D. Short, Michael Smith, Yearick 

   

 DELAWARE STATE SENATE 

 152nd GENERAL ASSEMBLY 

   

 SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 200 

   

 REQUESTING A REPORT FROM THE DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO FOLLOW UP ON THE RECOMMENDATIONS CONTAINED IN THE 154-PAGE DELAWARE DRUG PREVENTION CURRICULUM TASK FORCE REPORT. 

   

  WHEREAS, millions of dollars have been spent on drug use prevention that were ineffective; and   WHEREAS, too many young people are not prepared to handle peer pressure associated with taking drugs or drinking alcohol; and   WHEREAS, at this point in the drug overdose epidemic, researchers have built a sizable body of evidence indicating which prevention, treatment recovery, and harm reduction strategies work and which do not work; and   WHEREAS, drug overdose deaths in the U.S. are at a record high with fentanyl identified as the leading cause of the more than 100,000 deaths annually; and   WHEREAS, in Delaware, in a four-year period of time, there were 2,015 drug overdose deaths: 436 in 2020, 515 in 2021, 537 in 2022, and 527 in 2023; and   WHEREAS, a new drug, Xylazine, is showing up more frequently in overdose deaths, and people who use opioids laced with it are at higher risk for overdoses that are harder to treat with naloxone; and   WHEREAS, another new drug, nitazene analogues, can be as much as 40 times more potent than fentanyl and people overdosing on nitazene analogues may require several doses of naloxone to be revived; and   WHEREAS, in 2019, the Delaware Youth Drug Prevention Curriculum Task Force recommended a course of action to educate our youth about the dangers of drug, alcohol, and tobacco use to reduce the chance that youth will experiment with these substances; and   WHEREAS, in addition to equipping young people to avoid substance abuse, doing so would help reduce the costs of treatment or incarceration linked to the opioid epidemic; and   WHEREAS, prevention is always going to be the most effective way to stop addiction; and   WHEREAS, more programs are adapting evidence-based approaches and accepting the reality that preaching abstinence without context is ineffective; and   WHEREAS, studies testing the effectiveness of Life Skills Training show that it can reduce the prevalence of tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drug use by as much as 80%; and   WHEREAS, not all young people have role models to help them; even those with positive role models may not be receiving essential information; and   WHEREAS, the benefit to cost ratio has been shown to be as high as 37 to 1 under one particular evidence-based drug prevention curriculum, Botvin Lifeskills Training; and   WHEREAS, in addition to the human and moral importance of guiding young people away from substance abuse, doing so would be a far more fiscally sound policy than only focusing on the costs of treatment or incarceration linked to the opioid epidemic; and   WHEREAS, the cash savings is important, but not as important as the lives saved and the number of youths whose lives are not ruined by experimental drug use; and   WHEREAS, the opioid epidemic will not go away overnight, but we have an opportunity to save lives through proper education; and   WHEREAS, directing the dollars to evidence-based programs is critical given the ongoing nature of the epidemic.   NOW, THEREFORE:    BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the 152  nd   General Assembly of the State of Delaware, the House of Representatives concurring therein, that the General Assembly respectfully requests a report from the Delaware Department of Education to follow up on the recommendations contained in the 154-page Delaware Drug Prevention Curriculum Task Force Report.   BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the report should include the following for each grade level:   1) What drug prevention curriculum was used in the 2023/2024 school year.   2) What drug prevention curriculum will be used in the 2024/2025 school year.   3) An explanation of why any curriculum choices were made that are not evidenced based.   BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the report must be presented to the members of the General Assembly by October 1, 2024.      

 WHEREAS, millions of dollars have been spent on drug use prevention that were ineffective; and 

 WHEREAS, too many young people are not prepared to handle peer pressure associated with taking drugs or drinking alcohol; and 

 WHEREAS, at this point in the drug overdose epidemic, researchers have built a sizable body of evidence indicating which prevention, treatment recovery, and harm reduction strategies work and which do not work; and 

 WHEREAS, drug overdose deaths in the U.S. are at a record high with fentanyl identified as the leading cause of the more than 100,000 deaths annually; and 

 WHEREAS, in Delaware, in a four-year period of time, there were 2,015 drug overdose deaths: 436 in 2020, 515 in 2021, 537 in 2022, and 527 in 2023; and 

 WHEREAS, a new drug, Xylazine, is showing up more frequently in overdose deaths, and people who use opioids laced with it are at higher risk for overdoses that are harder to treat with naloxone; and 

 WHEREAS, another new drug, nitazene analogues, can be as much as 40 times more potent than fentanyl and people overdosing on nitazene analogues may require several doses of naloxone to be revived; and 

 WHEREAS, in 2019, the Delaware Youth Drug Prevention Curriculum Task Force recommended a course of action to educate our youth about the dangers of drug, alcohol, and tobacco use to reduce the chance that youth will experiment with these substances; and 

 WHEREAS, in addition to equipping young people to avoid substance abuse, doing so would help reduce the costs of treatment or incarceration linked to the opioid epidemic; and 

 WHEREAS, prevention is always going to be the most effective way to stop addiction; and 

 WHEREAS, more programs are adapting evidence-based approaches and accepting the reality that preaching abstinence without context is ineffective; and 

 WHEREAS, studies testing the effectiveness of Life Skills Training show that it can reduce the prevalence of tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drug use by as much as 80%; and 

 WHEREAS, not all young people have role models to help them; even those with positive role models may not be receiving essential information; and 

 WHEREAS, the benefit to cost ratio has been shown to be as high as 37 to 1 under one particular evidence-based drug prevention curriculum, Botvin Lifeskills Training; and 

 WHEREAS, in addition to the human and moral importance of guiding young people away from substance abuse, doing so would be a far more fiscally sound policy than only focusing on the costs of treatment or incarceration linked to the opioid epidemic; and 

 WHEREAS, the cash savings is important, but not as important as the lives saved and the number of youths whose lives are not ruined by experimental drug use; and 

 WHEREAS, the opioid epidemic will not go away overnight, but we have an opportunity to save lives through proper education; and 

 WHEREAS, directing the dollars to evidence-based programs is critical given the ongoing nature of the epidemic. 

 NOW, THEREFORE:  

 BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the 152  nd   General Assembly of the State of Delaware, the House of Representatives concurring therein, that the General Assembly respectfully requests a report from the Delaware Department of Education to follow up on the recommendations contained in the 154-page Delaware Drug Prevention Curriculum Task Force Report. 

 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the report should include the following for each grade level: 

 1) What drug prevention curriculum was used in the 2023/2024 school year. 

 2) What drug prevention curriculum will be used in the 2024/2025 school year. 

 3) An explanation of why any curriculum choices were made that are not evidenced based. 

 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the report must be presented to the members of the General Assembly by October 1, 2024. 

   

  SYNOPSIS   Because of the serious consequences of the drug overdose epidemic, this Senate Concurrent Resolution respectfully requests a report from the Delaware Department of Education to follow up on the recommendations contained in the 154-page Delaware Drug Prevention Curriculum Task Force Report.   Author: Senator Richardson  

 SYNOPSIS 

 Because of the serious consequences of the drug overdose epidemic, this Senate Concurrent Resolution respectfully requests a report from the Delaware Department of Education to follow up on the recommendations contained in the 154-page Delaware Drug Prevention Curriculum Task Force Report. 

 Author: Senator Richardson