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ED seal graphic 1998 White House Education Press Releases and Statements

THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary ________________________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release July 9, 1998

President Clinton Launches Nationwide Anti-Drug Media Campaign

World Congress Center
Atlanta, Georgia

Today, President Clinton launches the national expansion of the Anti-Drug Media Campaign he first proposed in last year's drug strategy and budget. The kick-off of the 5-year, $2 billion Anti-Drug Media Campaign will be linked by satellite to over 150 sites around the country.

The Largest Targeted Effort Ever to Teach Youth About Drugs

The President's Anti-Drug Media Campaign is designed to use the full power of the mass media to change youth attitudes toward drugs. It is designed to let teens know -- when they turn on the television, listen to the radio, or surf the "Net" -- that drugs are dangerous, wrong and can kill you. Activities planned for today's nationwide launch include:

In January 1998, the campaign began in 12 pilot cities (Atlanta, Baltimore, Boise, Denver, Hartford, Houston, Milwaukee, Portland (OR), San Diego, Sioux City, Tucson, and Washington, D.C.). Since ads started to run in these pilot cities, anti-drug awareness has increased and requests for anti-drug publications increased by more than 300 percent.

More Than an Ad Campaign

The anti-drug media campaign is more than just ads. It is coupled with public-private partnerships that will generate a wide range of coordinated anti-drug activities with schools, civic organizations, community anti-drug coalitions, and others. It also challenges media outlets to match the campaign's efforts -- on a dollar for dollar basis -- with related pro-bono ads or programming time for youth drug prevention.

A Record of Accomplishment

President Clinton has consistently proposed the largest, most ambitious anti-drug budgets ever -- and more than $17 billion for FY 99. His 1998 National Drug Control Strategy is a comprehensive ten-year plan designed to cut drug use and availability in half. Among other initiatives, the Strategy continues the anti-drug media campaign, improves and expands the Safe and Drug-Free Schools program, shields our borders with 1,000 new Border Patrol officers and advanced drug detection technologies, strengthens law enforcement with new DEA agents to crack down on heroin and methamphetamine traffickers, and cuts crime by testing and treating crime-committing addicts.


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Last Updated -- September 1, 1998, (pjk)