
HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 10
(By Mr. Speaker, Mr. Kiss, and Delegates Compton,
Amores,
Anderson, Angotti, Armstead, Ashley, Azinger, Beach, Beane,
Boggs, Border, Brown, Browning, Butcher, Campbell, Canterbury,
Caputo, Coleman, Craig, DeLong, Dempsey, Douglas, Doyle, Ellem,
Ennis, Evans, Fahey, Faircloth, Flanigan, Fleischauer, Fletcher,
Fox, Fragale, Frederick, Givens, Hall, Harrison, Hatfield,
Hrutkay, Hubbard, Keener, Kominar, Kuhn, Leach, Leggett, Louisos,
Mahan, Manchin, Manuel, Marshall, Martin, Mathews, McGraw,
Mezzatesta, Michael, Morgan, Overington, Paxton, Perdue, Perry,
Pethtel, Pino, Poling, Proudfoot, Prunty, Riggs, Romine,
Schadler, Shaver, Shelton, Smirl, J. Smith, L. Smith, Spencer,
Stalnaker, Staton, Stemple, Stephens, Susman, Swartzmiller, R.
Thompson, R. M. Thompson, Trump, Tucker, Varner, Walters, Warner,
Webb, Webster, C. White, G. White, H. White, Williams, Wills,
Wright and Yeager)
[Introduced January 28, 2002; referred to the
Committee on Rules.]
Requesting the Department of Health and Human Resources in
cooperation with the Department of Education, the Attorney
General, the Department of Public Safety and Military Affairs
and the Department of Transportation to conduct a study of the
problem of teenage in-vehicle drinking and related drug use.

Whereas, Teenagers with their ready access to the motor vehicle
have become increasingly mobile, adding a fluid dynamic to the
manner in which teenagers consume alcohol and illicit drugs;
alcohol and drug abuse by teenagers has not significantly declined
in the past several years and remains unacceptably high, possibly,
for certain groups, increasing in incidence and shifting to riskier settings; 1,695 fifteen to nineteen year olds were killed in
alcohol-related traffic fatalities in 1998 across America; and

Whereas, The Aluminum Anonymous Project surveyed 775 miles of
West Virginia roadsides for the discard rate of alcohol beverage
containers, from Charleston to Grafton to Clarksburg to Weston to
Charleston to Madison to Kentucky state line and from Morgantown to
Wheeling and from White Sulphur Springs to Beckley to Charleston to
Huntington in September, 1997, November, 1998 and April, 2000; it
found an average of 800 beer cans-bottles per mile of road annually
and, following up with "who's doing the tossing"? Interviews of
professionals working with teens and adults in alcohol and drug
settings who collectively estimated that fifty percent of the
discarded alcohol containers were coming from teenagers; in spite
of the 2001 National Survey of teenagers by the National Institute
on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)that includes questions of
drinking and drug use while driving and riding, perhaps for the
first time at the federal level, too little is known about teenage
alcohol and drug behavior after the car door closes; the January,
2001 "Report of the U. S. Surgeon General on Youth Violence", notes
that although youth violence may have peaked it will remain a major
problem; and

Whereas, The January, 2001, Report of the National Center on
Substance Abuse and Addition, New York, NY, "Shoveling Up: Impact
of Substance Abuse on State Budgets", states that only 2% of the
$339 million total that West Virginia spends annually on substance
abuse problems goes for prevention and treatment, while the
remaining 98% goes for cleaning up the wreckage caused by substance
abuse and addiction; therefore, be it

Resolved by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That the Department of Health and Human Resources in
cooperation with the Department of Education, the Attorney General,
the Department of Public Safety and Military Affairs and the
Department of Transportation conduct a study of the problem of
teenage in-vehicle drinking and related drug use by: (a) Assembling
what is known and not known about this behavior, its dynamic,
prevalence and incidence and; (b) assessing the effectiveness of
policies and programs, including their development, implementation
and evaluation and gauging the adequacy of interagency cooperation,
including data sharing and program report; and, be it

Further Resolved, That the Department of Health report to the
regular session of the Legislature, 2003, on its findings,
conclusions and recommendations, together with drafts of any legislation necessary to effect its recommendations including a
policy and program that would more comprehensively incorporate
teenage in-vehicle drinking and related drug use into the scope of
the state's substance abuse and youth violence prevention
strategies and the identification of new programs and their
estimated costs.