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WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Friday, May 3, 2024

Morrisey's office to participate in National Drug Take Back Day

State AG
Pills

CHARLESTON — West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey has announced his office will take part in this weekend’s National Prescription Drug Take Back Day by partnering with law enforcement and substance abuse prevention groups across West Virginia.

Representatives from the AG's office will assist state, county, and municipal agencies and groups in staffing Take Back sites around the state on Saturday, October 28.

The office also is coordinating with Capitol Police and the state Department of Homeland Security at a Take Back location from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, at the State Capitol Complex Safe Zone adjacent to the Culture Center at the Greenbrier/Washington Street entrance. 


Morrisey

“Events like this are vitally important to keeping potentially dangerous drugs off our streets,” Morrisey said. “If anyone has unused or unwanted prescription drugs, especially opioids and other pain medications, I encourage them to bring them in to be safely discarded and destroyed.

“Take Back Day is another way we are working to keep opioids out of our communities and help identify overprescribing in West Virginia.”

The AG's fficeo has participated in the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s National Prescription Drug Take Back Day each year since 2013. The office’s locations this weekend will be among the more than 60 collection sites in West Virginia.

As part of Take Back Day, the AG's office will assist the Wyoming County Sheriff’s Office at 893 Cook Parkway in Oceana and the Beckley Police Department at 501 Neville Street in Beckley.

To find a collection site near you, click here.

The DEA spearheads Drug Take Back Day, which was launched in 2010. During the event, local and state law enforcement agencies collect unused medication and responsibly dispose of it. The DEA typically hosts two prescription drug Take Back days per year — one in the spring and one in the fall.

The Attorney General Public Health Trust previously awarded prescription drug incinerators to law enforcement agencies across the state. The incinerators are used to destroy unwanted/expired pills and are shared among law enforcement agencies. The incinerators were awarded through the Dispose Responsibly of Prescriptions (DRoP) initiative, which also distributed drug disposal drop boxes throughout the state.

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