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HomeMy WebLinkAboutagenda.council.worksession.201908131 AGENDA CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION August 13, 2019 4:00 PM, City Council Chambers 130 S Galena Street, Aspen I.COUNCIL ROUNDTABLE 4:00-4:10 II.WORK SESSION II.A.Tobacco Tax Update 1 MEMORANDUM TO:Mayor and City Council FROM:CJ Oliver, Environmental Health and Sustainability Director THROUGH:Sara Ott, Interim City Manager MEETING DATE:August 13, 2019 RE:Use of Tobacco Tax Revenues and Ballot Question on Additional Tobacco Tax Revenues REQUEST OF COUNCIL: Staff is presenting a plan to allocate the sale tax revenues from the City of Aspen’s tobacco tax for Council consideration. Additionally, staff is requesting direction on whether to develop ballot language for a November vote on whether the City of Aspen can keep the additional $111,622 the tax generated and use them in accordance with the proposed spending plan. SUMMARY: Beginning in 2018, the City of Aspen has collected a 40% sales tax on non- cigarette tobacco and nicotine products and a $3 per pack tax on cigarettes. During it’s first year, the City collected $436,622 from this tax. Ballot language to initiate the tax in 2017 set parameters that the money could only be spent on financing health and human services, tobacco related health issues, and addiction and substance abuse education and mitigation. Ballot language is attached as Exhibit C with results provided in Exhibit D. Staff is recommending a plan wherein these funds would be spent in the coming years on a partnership with the Aspen School District. This plan came about after numerous local organizations, who are experts and interested in public health topics, stressed that there is currently very little work being done directly with youth in the schools and other settings to prevent the use of tobacco and particularly vaping products. This gap in services is especially impactful because vaping products have become a significant health and safety issue for students in the Aspen School District. according to recent statewide survey data. Because of this information staff is working with the Aspen School District to find ways to enhance programs that will address substance use and mental health with a focus on prevention. BACKGROUND: In order to assess the level of funding that would be available as a result of the local tobacco tax, staff were directed to wait until a full year of collection was complete before working on a spending plan. That first-year collection period was 1/1/2018- 12/31/2018. Prior to creating the spending plan, staff worked with interested parties including the Aspen School District, Pitkin County, Aspen Youth Center, Buddy Program and others to better understand the needs in the community around tobacco and substance use as well as mental health. During these planning sessions it was clear that the two key themes that should be a priority in the Aspen community were a 2 focus on youth programming in the schools and community as well as an emphasis on prevention. It was the City of Aspen’s intent not to initiate any new programs within the organization with the funds collected from the local tobacco tax but rather to use the new money to enhance existing programs to be able to make a greater impact on the areas specified in the ballot language. Due to their extensive opportunities for contact with youth and their families, the City has begun conversations with the Aspen School District about the funding and asked them to put together a plan for how to create maximum impact for youth nicotine and substance use and mental health. DISCUSSION: The Aspen School District, in conjunction with Aspen Family Connections (AFC) has prepared a plan (Exhibit A) to address the key areas identified in the ballot language throughout the Aspen community in a way that focuses on youth and prevention in a wholistic manner. The scope ranges from teaching young people key life skills and educating them on the dangers of substance use to teaching parents the skills that will help them to effectively navigate parenting a child through a maze endless temptations and risky situations they may face. In addition, there is a component that will create a youth advisory group which was a key deficit identified for the community. This will empower youth with a voice on these important topics and facilitate peer to peer interactions and messaging which is shown to be an effective means of behavior change, often much more so than that which comes from adult and parent sources alone. The plan incorporates inclusion and equity to help ensure that these services and programs are available to all who can use them in our area. The plan focuses on the Aspen School District but is also available to those involved in home school settings as well as informal childcare arrangements. The flow chart which is attached as Exhibit B shows the continuum of services from universal prevention down to crisis intervention and treatment in Pitkin County. The additional funding that the tobacco tax can provide presents a much needed opportunity to focus efforts on enhancing the top of the flow chart with better prevention services, resources and activities. Work done in the top section of the continuum can go far in alleviating pressures at the bottom of the continuum and begin to shift the need for service away from reactive interventions. Making this type of shift can be challenging without an opportunity like the one presented by the tobacco tax funds. There is a consistent need for services at the bottom end of the continuum so moving time and resources away is often not an option. However, these additional funds present an opportunity to enhance the top of this chart without negatively impacting the services provided at the bottom. In addition to this plan, the City is working with Mind Springs Health to explore funding additional staff hours at the Aspen School District for a mental health clinician. This position is currently a .6 FTE position, and the additional funding would be to bring it up to a full-time role. Information to assess the effectiveness of these programs will be available through the recurring school-based survey system which provides data on attitudes and use patterns for nicotine and other substances. This is a statewide survey that is conducted every two 3 years. The combination of additional staff time and funding for prevention services, represents a path forward that adheres to the principals of the tobacco tax ballot language and stands to make significant impact over the course of time FINANCIAL/BUDGET IMPACTS: The City has a 2018 tobacco tax fund balance of $436,662 which needs to be used for financing health and human services, tobacco related health issues, and addiction and substance abuse education and mitigation per voter approval. The estimates developed prior to the 2017 vote had calculated an anticipated $325,000 in collections. The additional $111,662 is subject to TABOR limitations and must be either returned to tax payers or can be used, if a ballot question is posed to voters asking the community if the City can keep the additional funds to use towards the purposes described in the original ballot language. Staff intends for the spending plan presented to serve as the model for all the tobacco tax revenues for the 2018 collection period. If City Council elects not to ask the community to keep the additional taxes that were collected in 2018 or if the community does not approve a ballot question for the City to keep those funds, the plan will be scaled back accordingly. These funds would be a General Fund expenditure. NEXT STEPS: If Council approves the proposed plan, staff will develop an Intergovernmental Agreement for working with the Aspen School District to administer the tobacco tax dollars in accordance with the 2017 ballot language. If directed, staff will also develop ballot language to ask to community if the City may keep the additional $111, 662 generated through the City’s tobacco tax to be spent on the plan that is presented in this memo and council presentation. ALTERNATIVES: Aspen City Council could elect to not propose a ballot question requesting the ability to keep the additional funds collected in 2018 and direct staff to determine the best way to return the funds. Council could also direct staff not to pursue an IGA with the Aspen School District and select a different avenue to distribute these funds. ATTACHMENTS: Exhibit A- Aspen School District and Aspen Family Connections Tobacco Tax Plan Exhibit B- Pitkin County Continuum of Support, Resource Sharing and Collaborative Work for At-Risk Youth and Families. Exhibit C- Resolution #122 of 2017, City of Aspen Tobacco Tax Ballot Question Exhibit D- Election Results, City of Aspen Tobacco Tax 4 5 Aspen School District - Aspen Family Connections The AFC Prevention Initiative Summary AFC Prevention Initiative is designed to create wide-ranging and measurable, long-term impact from the City of Aspen’s tobacco tax revenues, through an intergovernmental agreement with the Aspen School District. It will provide a systematic and coherent range of prevention services and activities, build shared community values around parenting, and link together existing prevention initiatives aimed at mental health, substance use and abuse and family and youth risk factors and behaviors. This is a community-wide, tiered initiative to prevent and reduce the use of tobacco, drugs and alcohol by children and young people, through building skills, competencies and cohesion, that in turn minimize risk factors and maximize protective factors. Foundational principles ●Collaboration and partnership -in delivering prevention activities it is essential to maximize potential and existing partnerships with youth-serving community partners, including KidsFirst, City of Aspen Recreation Department, Aspen Police Department, Aspen Youth Center, Buddy Program, Mind Springs Health, Youth Zone and many others, taking advantage of the excellent work already being done and avoiding duplication of effort; ●Inclusion and Equity - ensuring that all populations, including special populations (low- income families, Latinx, LGBTQ, families with disabilities, families outside the school system, including preschool, homeschool and the informal childcare sector) are provided for in terms of programming ●Outcomes - all elements of the Project will be evaluated annually, in order to report to City Council, the public and to partners, looking at changes in behaviors and attitudes, The case for prevention to address substance use and abuse: Research shows that the most effective actions that can be taken to prevent substance use and abuse take place in both the school and family environments, and are both universal (everyone in population) and also targeted to at-risk and under-served individuals and groups. 6 2 Risk and protective factors contribute to the initiation, maintenance, and escalation of alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drug use. These factors - which include lack of parental supervision, academic problems, undiagnosed mental health problems, peer substance use, drug availability, poverty, peer rejection, and child abuse or neglect - are associated with increased likelihood of youth substance use and abuse. Risk factors that occur during early childhood further increase the risk of youth substance abuse. On the other hand, multiple protective factors such as parental support and involvement, parental resilience, social connections, concrete support for parents and knowledge of parenting and of child and youth development can reduce, and even eliminate, the impact of even the strongest risk factors. Aspen Family Connections already provides access to children, youth and families across multiple settings The Aspen School District provides the largest point of access to the majority of children, youth and families within the Aspen area, and, crucially, is home to Aspen Family Connections, the school-based family resource center, established in 2016 by a significant partnership led by Pitkin County Department of Human Services, Aspen School District and 15 other child and youth-serving agencies and nonprofits. Aspen Family Connections now works directly with dozens of local families, helping them to find and navigate local resources, services and providers to that will, in turn, assist them in managing challenges and change, with a goal of self-sufficiency. AFC operates on the basis of constant collaboration, involving multiple partners to support families and share service delivery and planning, and AFC is just one part of a significant continuum of intervention support for families that includes Pitkin County DHS Adult and Family Services, Mind Springs Health, The Buddy Program, YouthZone and other judicial and youth-serving partners. However, from the outset, AFC was also tasked with delivering universal prevention services, and their efforts to do so, created a range of events focused on informing and educating families on a range of topics (from vaping and marijuana, to building resilience, coping with social media, and co-parenting through divorce and Spanish-language parenting education - among numerous others). For two years these events have received a very positive reception and have been well-attended, demonstrating an appetite within the community for parenting education, information and for families coming together to support each other. 7 3 Prevention in Schools Our schools provide a key venue for social and emotional learning, in order to help students navigate the world more effectively. The Aspen School District is in the process of adopting the CASEL framework which has identified five core competencies: self awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills and responsible decision-making. This work will directly complement and inform the work of the AFC Prevention Initiative and the community’s overall prevention objectives that the Initiative will deliver. In addition, the School District currently employs a prevention specialist who works primarily within the Aspen Middle School, delivering the LifeSkills curriculum to students and school counselors in all schools who provide some group prevention activities. Prevention beyond the Schools The activities of Aspen Family Connections are deliberately not restricted to the School District, but works County-wide, and AFC has access to a wide range of other settings within the community, including other schools, preschools and, through work with many partners and families beyond the School District. Of these, Early Childhood is one of the first and most important opportunities for substance abuse prevention. Aspen Family Connections has a close and supportive relationship with KidsFirst and is already working on plans for a program of prevention/intervention directed at young families and providers of childcare and early childhood education. This will build upon the important existing frameworks of Pyramid Plus and TS Gold, as well as the existing services provided by the Family Visitor Program, Community Health, Aspen Valley Hospital, Colorado Preschool Program and others. The AFC Prevention Initiative will ensure that young families and the early childhood provider community are placed at the forefront of prevention service delivery and activities, AFC Prevention Initiative Key elements and activities: 8 4 Early Childhood prevention: (families as target): ●Parenting Education - working mainly with groups, incorporating the work of KidsFirst, Family Visitor Program, Community Health, faith-based organizations and other social entities, using numerous venues and generating new opportunities for education and contact with parents. ●A coherent , evidence-based curriculum/program (e.g., The Incredible Years) to be used as much as possible across agencies and providers, which will require training of trainers but include a range of venues and modalities such as home-based family coaching. ●Spanish-language parenting and provider education (maybe using models already adopted by other partners in the valley, e.g., Valley Settlement Project, including training community members as trainers and facilitators, and home-based learning opportunities. Elementary and Middle School prevention (families as target): ●Parenting Education, expanding the existing AFC program and building into it a greater coherence with the School District’s CASEL framework, at an age at which children become more aware and autonomous - teaching parents how to set clear expectations and rules against the use of drugs and alcohol, reinforce positive behavior, engage in effective family management practices and nurture a close and caring relationship with their children. ●Expansion of AFC program beyond school district families and in additional settings. Middle and High School prevention: (teens as target) ●Creation of a Youth Advisory Group (meeting a significant community deficit in terms of youth empowerment and Youth Voice), using an evidence-based model to engage, recruit, train, and manage the activities of the Group. ●The Youth Advisory Group will feed into, and take a lead in the development of youth prevention and engagement activities targeted at substance use prevention and reduction. ●Youth Advisory Group will develop skills of civic engagement and can provide input in a range of public forums (City Council, Pitkin Public Health). ●Convening of more group prevention activity (eg an Alateen-type Group, for children 9- 19, who are relatives or friends of people suffering from substance use disorder and deal with the issues that are affecting them in some way. 9 5 ●Identification and involvement of young people who may not be part of the school district. ●Working with local partners to build up prosocial activities for teens. ●Build activities to support existing school initiatives around truancy prevention, youth employment and alternative paths. 10 PITKIN COUNTY CONTINUUM OF SUPPORT, RESOURCE-SHARING AND COLLABORATIVE WORK FOR AT-RISK YOUTH AND FAMILIES UNIVERSAL PREVENTION SERVICES, RESOURCES AND ACTIVITIES •School-based supports, social/emotional curriculums, counseling, school-based health center and substance abuse prevention activity •Community based programs provided by partner organizations such as The Buddy Program, Response, Aspen Youth Center, Aspen Recreation Department, and many others •Family/parenting prevention/support programs including AFC's program of parenting education and support, KidsFirst programs, Family Visitor support for new families etc. ASPEN FAMILY CONNECTIONS (AFC) AND FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER OF RFSD CMP Services for referred families •Family meetings and Individualized Service and Support teams •Case management •Colorado Community Response (CCR) •Connection/referral to a wide range of community resources and providers focused on youth and needs and goals, funding support DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES Services for referred families: •Case management •PA3 Prevention •Core Services providing funding and referral to providers •CMP Family Engagement Meetings (individualized service and support teams for families. •Economic Services •Therapeutic, parenting support, life skills and substance services JUVENILE JUSTICE/YOUTHZONE Services for referred families •Diversion/deferred sentencing •SB 94 Services and Assessment Meetings (SAMS) for which delinquent youth are screened in as eligible. Standing team meets monthly or as needed •Case Management and SB94 funding support COLLABORATIVE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM (CMP) MULTI-AGENCY FAMILY MEETINGS AND PROGRAMS OVERSEEN BY THE PITKIN COUNTY INTER-AGENCY OVERSIGHT GROUP (IOG) REFERRAL PATHWAY Child Welfare referral: 1-844-264-5437 Prevention referral: (970)-429-6122 MORE INTENSIVE SCHOOL-BASED INTERVENTION AND SERVICES •Wide range of Special Education support services •Programs and groups to support at-risk children, prevent truancy, provide academic support, substance abuse counseling etc. •Referrals for mental health concerns to school-based counselors and therapists and outside providers REFERRAL PATHWAY AFC: (970) 205 7025 and via schools/partners/community REFERRAL PATHWAY Via law enforcement/judicial process 11 PITKIN COUNTY IOG PARTNERS IN THE COLLABORATIVE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM (CMP) •Pitkin County Department of Health and Human Services •9th Judicial District •9th Judicial District Department of Probation •Colorado Department of Youth Services •Aspen School District •Roaring Fork School District •Pitkin County Department of Public Health •Mind Springs Health •RESPONSE •The Buddy Program •Kids First •YouthZone •S.B.94 •Mountain Family Health Centers •Aspen Police Department GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS CMP: The Collaborative Management Program is a State-funded, collective community approach to serving children/youth with complex needs through a tailored integrated approach and with child, youth and family engagement in planning, services and solutions. 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