DDW COORDINATOR TRAINING PORTAL

Next DDW Coordinator Quarterly Meeting

The next Drugs Don't Work Coordinator quarterly meeting will be held on December 12, 2024 from 10:00 to 11:00 AM via Zoom.

SPEAKER: 
Chris Manning, Associate Executive Director of The Council on Alcohol and Drugs


TOPIC: 
Reasonable Suspicion Training

The resources housed in the DDW Coordinator Training Portal are exclusivly for the use of DDW Coordinators so that they can stay up to date with the changing landscape of Drug Free Workplace laws, emerging threats to employers, and request live/Zoom/DVD based training for their members. New resources will be added to various training sections as they become available.

Ready to learn?

FEATURED TRAINING:

Fentanyl and the Workplace

CHAMBER EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

This presentation was just fantastic. There was so much information that our members were able to take away and understand about the emerging threat of Fentanyl in our Georgia communities. Most communities have no idea that this issue is headed for their county or city and every Drugs Don't Work Coordinator in the state needs to hold one of these trainings for their members. Let's all do our part to protect our communities and save as many lives as possible by training as many businesses in our communities as possible about this topic.

>> BOOK A FENTANYL TRAINING

Training Coordinator: The Council on Alcohol and Drugs, Inc.

The Council on Alcohol and Drugs is a 50 year-old nonprofit, 501(c)3 substance abuse prevention and education agency that develops programs and materials based on the most current research on drug use and its impact on community. The Council is an official affiliate of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce and a partnership program of the South Carolina State Chamber of Commerce. Our offices are located in the Georgia Chamber of Commerce headquarters in Atlanta. The Council's Drugs Don't Work program has been the official drug free workplace provider for the state of Georgia since 1993. Drugs Don't Work in Georgia is funded by the Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities, Division of Addictive Diseases, Office of Prevention Services and Programs. > LEARN MORE