Orange County NC Website
= I AK Local Boards' Dollars <br />Have I m o rta nt <br />p <br />Community <br />Impact <br />The work of the state ABC Commission to <br />establish the North Carolina Initiative to Reduce <br />Underage Drinking is not happening in a <br />OV STOP UVDETaGE DTIVVVG. vacuum. <br />For decades the local ABC boards' retail sales <br />have generated funds that support work in <br />communities across the state to raise awareness <br />and treat the results of alcohol's damaging <br />effects. <br />In the fiscal year just ended, the local <br />boards distributed $75 million locally, <br />and more than $10 million of that funded <br />alcohol education and treatment at the <br />community level. As the largest boards <br />in the state, Wake and Mecklenburg ABC <br />always count for the bulk of the alcohol <br />education spending at the board level, but <br />smaller boards with smaller budgets are <br />doing their parts too. <br />Five local boards in Brunswick County <br />have pooled their resources to co- sponsor a <br />$12,000 alcohol education program for their <br />region. Brunswick County, Ocean Isle Beach, <br />Southport, Shallotte, and Sunset Beach started <br />the collaborative venture in April and hope to <br />sustain it over a three -year period. "We are <br />trying to work together locally to help stop <br />underage drinking," said Arthur Duncan, General <br />Manager of the Shallotte board. <br />And in Moore County, the ABC board this <br />year contributed $100,000 to local programs <br />($20,000 apiece to Bethesda House, Bethany <br />House and Friend to Friend alone) in addition to <br />contributions to the Boys and Girls Club, Moore <br />County Day Reporting Center and Moore County <br />Public Schools' `second chance' program. <br />Moore County General Manager Pam Smith <br />said the ABC board makes its evaluations <br />thoughtfully and with an eye toward long- <br />term impact. "We make sure the programs are <br />successful, and they have a demonstrated need. <br />We want to make sure the money is being put to <br />good use," Smith said. <br />