Receive alerts from your local agencies
...or text your ZIP CODE to 888777 for mobile alerts

Full Notification

West Windsor Police Department, NJ
Friday October 12th, 2012 :: 11:37 a.m. EDT

Community

WWPD is a designated Project Medicine Drop location which allows citizens to safely dispose of their unused meds

Chief Joseph M. Pica, Jr. in cooperation with the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs and Attorney General Jeffrey S. Chiesa has designated The West Windsor Police Department as a Project Medicine Drop location which allows citizens to safely dispose of their unused prescription medications.
Today’s milestone, announced during National Recovery Month, makes it easier than ever for New Jersey residents to take an active role in the fight against the nationwide epidemic of prescription drug abuse. Members of the public are invited to come in and use the West Windsor Police Department Project Medicine Drop site 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year, to dispose of their unused and expired prescription medications.
The Project Medicine Drop boxes are lockable, metal containers, resembling mailboxes and installed at select New Jersey police departments, sheriff’s offices, and State Police barracks. The boxes enable consumers to drop off their unused or excess medications safely and securely, with law enforcement agencies authorized to take custody of controlled dangerous substances.
The program helps keep prescription drugs from falling into the hands of those who might make them available for abuse, and prevents them from being flushed into the water supply or thrown into the trash where they could contaminate the environment.
In a partnership endorsed by the State Department of Environmental Protection, Morristown-based Covanta Energy, a nationwide operator of energy-from-waste and renewable energy facilities, has agreed to destroy the medications at no cost to taxpayers, thus potentially saving the police departments thousands of dollars per year.
Since the program’s inception, consumers have dropped off more than 2,000 pounds of unused medications at the original seven Project Medicine Drop locations.
According to the latest National Survey on Drug Use and Health, conducted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, more than 70 percent of people aged 12 and older who abused prescription pain relievers obtained them from friends or relatives, compared with five percent who obtained them from drug dealers or the internet.
The scope of America's prescription drug abuse problem is staggering:
 New Jersey in 2011 saw more than 8,600 separate admissions to State-licensed or certified substance abuse treatment programs due to prescription painkiller abuse – an increase of more than 200 percent over the past five years, and nearly 700 percent since the beginning of the decade.
 In June 2011, the New Jersey State Commission of Investigation reported that a growing number of young people are abusing prescription drugs, and noted a significant trend in which the practice has led to increases in the number of young people addicted not only to painkillers, but to heroin as well.
 Every day, 40 Americans die from an overdose caused by prescription painkiller abuse, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Overdoses of opioid prescription drugs now kill more people in the U.S. than heroin and cocaine combined.
 The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has reported that two in five teenagers mistakenly believe prescription drugs are "much safer" than illegal drugs.

The Office of the Attorney General will partner with the Drug Enforcement Administration - New Jersey Division, Partnership for a Drug Free New Jersey, and other agencies to promote “The Right Prescription for New Jersey,” a multi-media effort targeting the parents of middle school students with prescription drug abuse prevention information. More information can be found at www.AmericanMedicineChest.com.
Project Medicine Drop is one component of the Division of Consumer Affairs' comprehensive effort to halt the diversion and abuse of prescription drugs. Project Medicine Drop is inspired by the success of the DEA’s National Prescription Drug Take Back Initiative. The next DEA-sponsored Take Back Day will be held Saturday, September 29. Project Medicine Drop, however, enables consumers to dispose of unused medications at any time throughout the year.
The effort also includes the New Jersey Prescription Monitoring Program, a statewide database that tracks prescription data on Controlled Dangerous Substances (CDS) and Human Growth Hormone (HGH) medications dispensed in New Jersey. It includes enhanced enforcement initiatives, including a comprehensive reorganization of the Division's Enforcement Bureau to focus on drug diversion investigations and indiscriminate prescribing by healthcare practitioners. It also includes strategies to reduce the supply of drugs available for abuse, and greater public awareness about the dangers of abuse.
For much more information on the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs' initiative to halt the diversion and abuse of prescription drugs, view the Division's NJPMP website, http://www.njconsumeraffairs.gov/pmp and the Division's Project Medicine Drop website http://www.njconsumeraffairs.gov/meddrop.

Address/Location
West Windsor Police Department, NJ
271 Clarksville Rd
West Windsor Township, NJ 08550

Contact
Emergency: 9-1-1
Non-emergencies: 609-799-1222

Lt. Robert Garofalo
Operation Lighthouse
[email protected]
609-799-1222

TEXT-A-TIP -  Text TIP WWPD followed by your message, to 888777

Submit an anonymous web tip

Navigate & Discover