Afterball Warning To Absentee Parents
ALAC PRESS RELEASE
25 JUNE 2003
Afterball
Warning To Absentee Parents
Parents who send their
college students off to poorly supervised afterball parties
are failing their children, says the Alcohol Advisory
Council.
“In the last two weeks we have seen press
reports of police being called to help out with gatecrashers
and grossly intoxicated students at afterball parties,” says
ALAC Chief Executive Officer Dr Mike MacAvoy.
“In one
case, apparently four parents and a few students were trying
to control between 150 and 175 young people.
“That is
just ridiculous.”
Dr MacAvoy says afterball parties
are a fact of life these days. And young people are
consuming alcohol at these parties so it is important that
they do so within the law and safely.
“The question I
have to ask is where are the parents?
“Organising a
bus to transport the young people to and from the function
does not guarantee their safety.
“It is time people
realised that drink driving is not the only risk from
excessive alcohol consumption.”
Another question is
who is supplying the alcohol and in what
quantities?
“Many parents say they give their children
alcohol to teach them to drink safely.
“But supplying
young people with so much alcohol that they end up drunk,
covered in vomit, or as is possible with excessive binge
drinking, in hospital recovering from alcohol poisoning, is
not teaching anyone anything about drinking
safely.
“Parents have a duty of care to their children
which unfortunately too many parents are ignoring.”
Dr
MacAvoy says there are some basic commonsense rules to
ensure the safety of young people at afterball
functions.
- Don’t supply your child with more alcohol
than he or she can safely drink.
- Ensure there is
adequate adult supervision.
- Ensure there is food
available.
ALAC has produced a set of guidelines called Planning Parties to assist adults to work alongside young people to ensure afterball parties were fun, safe and within the law.
"We've had reports of afterball parties that
have been incident free and the students have had a great
night out. The key, we think, is for adults to work together
with the students in the planning - it's their party. Give
them a hand. Be there, but you don't need to intrude."
The guidelines are directed at the adults who work
with the young people and they highlight and interpret the
legal issues that surround such events. They also offer
suggestions to follow in planning the party.
These
include setting up a working party, establishing a budget,
gaining sponsorship, choosing venues, security issues,
transport and entertainment. A set of templates is included
with sample letters for party organisers to alert and
involve police, caregivers, boards of trustees and so on.
Dr MacAvoy does warn that the guidelines are a good
start, but that both adults and young people need to be wary
that things can still go wrong. He says it is most
unfortunate Ashburton encountered difficulties as they have
been most committed to issues around youth drinking
recently.
Dr MacAvoy says ALAC worked with
representatives from the community - including local police,
health promoters, road safety coordinators and district
licensing agencies and school principals - to provide the
guidelines.
Copies of Planning Parties: a resource for
those working with students organising safe afterball
parties can be downloaded from the ALAC’s website
http://www.alcohol.org.nz/resources/publications/index.html
ENDS