The Army Substance Abuse Programs  mission is to strengthen the overall fitness and effectiveness of the Army’s workforce, to conserve manpower, and to enhance the combat readiness of Soldiers.
One Force, One Fight!

The Army Substance Abuse Program, or ASAP, is a comprehensive program, which combines prevention education, suicide prevention, urinalysis testing, risk reduction, and civilian employees counseling services. ASAP Division is assigned to the U.S. Army Garrison Directorate Human Resources, Fort Moore Georgia. 

These programs are designed to strengthen the overall fitness and effectiveness of the Fort Moore Military Community  and to enhance the combat readiness of its personnel and units. The main purpose is to eliminate alcohol and/or other drugs abuse. The prevention education function will provide current substance abuse prevention information for all members of the FMMC.

The civilian employees Counseling Services will concentrate on assisting supervisors with short term counseling to employees with personal, job related and relationship problems and the urinalysis function is a program to deter and identify drug use/abuse.

Our objectives include:

  • Increase individual fitness and overall unit readiness.
  • Provide services which are proactive and responsive to the needs of the Army’s workforce and emphasize alcohol and other drug abuse deterrence, prevention, education, and rehabilitation.
  • Implement alcohol and other drug risk reduction and prevention strategies that respond to potential problems before they jeopardize readiness, productivity, and careers.
  • Restore to duty those substance-impaired Soldiers who have the potential for continued military Service.
  • Provide effective alcohol and other drug abuse prevention and education at all levels of command, and encourage commanders to provide alcohol and drug-free leisure activities.
  • Ensure all personnel assigned to ASAP staff are appropriately trained and experienced to accomplish their missions.
  • Achieve maximum productivity and reduce absenteeism and attrition among civilian corps members by reducing the effects of the abuse of alcohol and other drugs.
  • Improve readiness by extending services to the Soldiers, civilian corps members, and Family members.