George C. Marshall High School PTSA
May 6 2008

Project Hospitality

Posted by: DMK

at 3:44 am

 

Project Hospitality Tackles Underage Drinking

 
 
 
       The Safe Community Coalition (SCC) along with Fairfax County leaders join the Acting Surgeon General of the United States, Rear Admiral Steven Galson, MD, MPH,  in calling on all citizens to reduce underage drinking and to restrict teenagers’ access to alcohol. Rear Admiral Galson states recent research demonstrates that alcohol harms developing adolescent brains and that young people who start drinking before the age of fifteen are five times more likely to have alcohol-related problems later in life.  Fairfax County Board of Supervisors Chairman Gerald Connolly, Police Chief David Rohrer, and School Board Chairman Daniel Storck strongly support the Countywide Initiative to Reduce Underage Drinking and the “Parents Who Host, Lose the Most” (PWH) public awareness campaign to educate parents about the dangers of providing alcohol to those under 21 years old. This campaign was initiated by the nineteen school-community coalitions under the Safe and Drug-Free Youth Section of Fairfax County Public Schools and implemented by the Countywide Initiative to Reduce Underage Drinking task force  consisting of over 35 organizations including the school-community coalitions, county agencies, the police, the school system, faith leaders, and community organizations.  The objectives of Parents Who Host, Lose the Most are:

 

-to inform parents about the health and safety risks of serving alcohol to teens.

 

-to increase awareness of and compliance with the 2006 revised Virginia underage drinking laws.

 

Project Hospitality is an initiative of the Safe Community Coalition and a key component of the “Parents Who Host” campaign in Fairfax County.  Through this community-wide education program, the program urges parents to plan alcohol-free post-prom parties for their graduating seniors. Founded  13 years ago by Margi Vanderhye, a McLean parent and current member of the Virginia House of Delegates, Project Hospitality each spring brings together area hotels, motels, restaurants, the public and private schools of Fairfax, Arlington, and Alexandria, and the police to promote safe prom nights for high school seniors. Through this initiative the project hopes to persuade parents to chaperone the parties they host and discourage unchaperoned post-prom parties in hotels.  Because many parents are unaware that the legal age for drinking is 21 parents are informed that there are legal consequences for them and their teens if they permit underage drinking.

 

Parents are also made aware that if they rent a hotel room for a post-prom party, the hotels require them to be there chaperoning the party the whole time. If there is an accident, the adult signing for the room is legally liable.  The program warns parents about the dangers of teens driving under the influence of alcohol that night, and urges parents to offer their own teens and their friends a ride out of any risky situation with no questions asked. In circulating the dates and places of the proms to area hotels, restaurants, and the Arlington and Fairfax County police, the whole community is united in promoting common sense and safety for area youth on prom night.

 

County law enforcement, business, and community leaders strongly support SCC’s program of uniting the community in an effort to keep seniors’ special night free from accidents and tragedy.

 

Colonel David M. Rohrer, Fairfax County Chief of Police, has endorsed the initiative, stating, “During the 2008 Prom Season, the Fairfax County Police Department has reaffirmed our partnership with Project Hospitality.  It is through community partnerships like this one that we can have a positive effect on underage drinking and promote a safe and memorable prom experience.”

 

Jim Wordsworth, the Virginia Director Emeritus of the National Restaurant Association and Chairman of the Small Business Council of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, expressed his enthusiasm for Project Hospitality, commenting, “This program has two measurable goals – the immediacy of further reducing the incidents of underage drinking and bringing the Hospitality Industry, local law enforcement and parents together on this life threatening issue with our young people.”   

 

Paul Giovanini, General Manager of the Sheraton National Hotel in Arlington, agreed with Project Hospitality's objectives and stated, "Our hotel, like many in the Northern Virginia area, will be host to a number of local High School Proms.  Under no circumstances will prom attendees or non- prom party crashers be allowed to rent guestrooms or suites without full-time parental attendance and supervision.  We will also screen all reservations prior to the event and monitor check-in registration for absentee parents."

 

As Margaret Vanderhye, Project Hospitality’s founder, points out, “In the happy and expectant atmosphere surrounding prom season, students may easily blur the distinction between adult settings and privileges that accompany prom night with adulthood itself.  Parents should communicate clearly that the consumption of alcohol, the use of hotel party rooms, or the total suspension of rules and expectations are not acceptable.  Our goal is that students and their parents remember Prom 2008 as a special highlight of the school year.”

 

For Further Information, Contact Sherry Wells, SCC Project Hospitality Committee Chair

 sbwells@cox.net; 703-241-0335

 

For information on “Parents Who Host, Lose the Most” contact Sara Freund, co-chair of the Countywide Initiative to Reduce Underage Drinking at sara.freund@verizon .net

 

Note: the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles Carrier Section will provide verification that the limousine companies available for prom night hire have proper operating authority in the state. (Call toll free: 1-866-878-2582)

 

 

For additional resources to help keep our youth safe during prom season, check:

www.buzzfreeprom.com

 

www.sadd.org:  Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD) has a Contract for Life between parents and children.

 

 

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