Drug & Alcohol Awareness Training in Brooklyn

When

Wednesday March 13, 2019 1pm-3pm OR
Thursday, March 21, 2019 4pm-6pm


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Where

Sunset Park section of Brooklyn 
near 36th Street subway (Connect to D, N or R)
NO WALK-INS-Exact Addresss Provided at time of Reg
Brooklyn, NY 11232
 

 
Driving Directions 

Contact

Peter Altuch 
OSHA 10 NY 
800-501-9440 
 
 

2 Hour Drug & Alcohol Awareness Training DOB Approved in Brooklyn 3/13 OR 3/21 (Afternoons) 

Trainees will become familiar with adverse effects of drug and alcohol in the workplace. ii. Trainees will be able to recognize problems associated with substance dependency. Approved for 2 hours towards SST card in NYC. This course is an elective course that can help fulfill the requirement for an individual applying for a Site Safety Card -DOB

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$84 when you pay ahead online 
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Pay at door with cash or *card $99
$4 Service fee applies.  No Refunds for advance payment- you can reschedule

 

Trainees will become generally familiar with adverse effects of drug and alcohol in the workplace. ii. Trainees will be able to recognize problems associated with substance dependency. iii. Explain that the purpose of this training help trainees avoid working while under the influence of drugs and/or alcohol; also adding that this training can help trainees be less susceptible and better at recognizing, avoiding and preventing (RAP) adverse consequences of drug and/or alcohol use and abuse. iv. This training may also help trainees better recognize and understand issues of chemical dependence that may adversely affect the lives of others who they know and love. (Note: This is a pedagogical technique to help with trainee’s ‘buy-in’ to the course material because they will feel this training gives them information they can use beyond the workplace and fulfills a tactic in adult learning called ‘What’s in it for me,’ where workers become more interested in a topic ‘takeaway’ because it has relevance elsewhere in their lives.) (SAMHSA), in 2014 an estimated 21.5 million Americans aged 12 years or older have a significant problem with alcohol or drugs