Pubdate: Wed, 16 Feb 2000 Source: Jerusalem Post (Israel) Copyright: 2000,sThe Jerusalem Post Contact: PO Box 81, Jerusalem, 91000 - Israel Fax: + 972-2-5389527 Feedback: http://www.jpost.co.il/com/Letters/input.html Website: http://www.jpost.co.il/ Author: Gil Hoffman MKS ARGUE OVER HOW TO FIGHT DRUGS (February 16) - Education Minister Yossi Sarid and Knesset Education Committee chairman Zevulun Orlev, addressing a joint meeting of the Knesset Committee for the War Against Drugs and the Education Committee yesterday, agreed that drugs are becoming an epidemic in the nation's schools but disagreed about how to solve the problem. "There's been a huge increase in pupils' use of many kinds of drugs over the last several years,"police deputy commander Suzy Ben-Baruch told the committees, singling out the psychedelic drug Ecstasy, in which the number of tablets confiscated by police has increased from 10 to 463,000 since 1992, when the drug was a relative newcomer to Israel. Reported cases of juvenile crime involving drugs increased 24 percent in 1999, over the previous year, according to a report distributed at the meeting. To deal with the situation, Orlev (National Religious Party) called for a five-year anti-drug education program to be introduced in schools nationwide, standardizing existing programs to make sure they are available in every school. Orlev told Sarid that implementing a national program would not cost much. Sarid (Meretz) responded that existing programs are doing a good job and that he has no room in this year's budget to finance new programs, even at low cost. Sarid blasted his NRP predecessor, Yitzhak Levy, for substantially cutting funding for anti-drug programs and said he intends to increase funding next year for the existing programs. "There is almost no school in the educational system that does not have some kind of program to educate pupils about the dangers of drugs," Sarid said, calling for parents and communities to aid schools in educating children on the issue. "When a community takes the responsibility to deal with this subject, it is successful," Sarid said. "Community involvement is no less important in this struggle than any funding." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck