By James B. Grossman
OCP Outreach Coordinator 
Recently five young people from Woodstock Union High School welcomed 34  retail clerks from 10 local stores to a Department of Liquor Control  training co-sponsored by the Ottauqueechee Community Partnership (OCP).   The youth represented the Spectrum Teen Board, VTLSP (Vermont Teen  Leadership Program),  and OVX (Our Voices Exposed).
You might wonder why youth would be involved with retail training.   These young people wanted to thank and recognize clerks from retail  stores that help keep our community safe by not selling alcohol and  tobacco to underage purchasers.  For retail clerks to know that they are  appreciated is important.   For youth to know that they have a voice  and their feelings and opinions are taken seriously is critical. As we  prepare youth to enter the adult world, practicing civic engagement is  critical in raising aware and active citizens. Fostering working bonds  between youth and adults helps create not only a community, but also a  safer community for all.  Spectrum and VTLSP also used the opportunity  to continue the youth/retailer partnership, telling the stores about  their upcoming Sticker Shock campaign. The project entails placing  stickers on alcoholic beverages and putting up posters. These stickers  will display warnings such as “distributing alcohol to minors can leave  you with a $10,000 fine and 5 years in jail” etc. The teens will design  both the stickers as well as the posters that will be displayed. The  certificates given to retailers who passed all compliance checks for the  past two years stated “Congratulations on passing DLC compliance checks  in 2010. Thank you for keeping Vermont youth safe by limiting alcohol  and tobacco sales to adults, thereby reducing delinquency, DWI’s and car  crashes from alcohol and reducing youth smoking.”
This year the businesses that received the recognition are:
Mac’s Market, Woodstock, Downers Market, Downers 4 Corners, South  Royalton Market, Randolph Smart Shop, Champlain Farms, The Pit Stop,  Pittsfield, Cumberland Farms, Woodstock and Windsor, and the Woodstock  Inn Gift Shop.
Certificates were presented by Marissa Farbman and Stephanie Stanglin  from VTLSP, and Indi Bjornsson, Tabitha Coleman and Sam Clement from the  Spectrum Teen Board.  Sam Clement then presented to the group about the  upcoming Sticker Shock initiative that the two groups will be working  on with OCP this year.
The training was led by Steve Waldo, who gave tips to the sellers on how  to identify underage purchasers.   “Most customers just walk into a  store and go right for what they want to buy, but  someone who’s  underage might circle around a bit, looking to see if  there are any  adults they know and looking for the cheapest beer,”  said Steve Waldo,  trainer for the Department of Liquor training. Waldo a captivating  presenter, with more than 25 years of experience in enforcement and  education, explained the liability of sellers and reviewing different  sales scenarios.  He educated clerks about how to reading ID’s and  offering a host of “trick” questions to verify that the identification  truly belongs to the presenter.
Concerned youth, committed retailers and a lively speaker made this  required state training an interesting and fun evening reflecting  positive community spirit.  We would like to give thanks to Matteo  Bjornsson who photographed this event.  For more information on future  trainings and other community events, contact the Ottauquechee Community  Partnership at 457-2679.   
