Pubdate: Mon, 28 Feb 2000 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2000, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Contact: 414-224-8280 Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Forum: http://www.jsonline.com/cgi-bin/ubb/ultimate.cgi Author: Amy Hetzner, staff writer Bookmark: MAP's link to Wisconsin articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/wi WAUKESHA SCHOOLS TURN TO TV TO SPREAD ANTI-DRUG MESSAGE Segment Aimed At Parents Shows How Teenagers Can Get High By Sniffing Seeking to increase the audience from previously poorly attended parent outreach efforts, the Waukesha School District took to cable television this month with messages targeted, at least in one case, to adult viewers only. The district's prime-time airing of a 15-minute video that detailed how children can get high by sniffing everyday household products brought criticism from one substance abuse expert and support from another. The video, which was shown most recently at 7:15 p.m. Thursday, includes a warning that it is intended for adults only and could increase inhalant usage if viewed by children. During the segment, which is lightly peppered with anti-drug messages, teens and drug counselors lay out a variety of ways to get high by sniffing everything from paint thinner to spray paint to white-out. They also tell parents how to identify inhalant addiction and how to teach their children to refuse drugs. "Where kids can have access to seeing something, we generally discourage any explicit explanation about how to do it," said Harvey Weiss, executive director of the National Inhalant Prevention Coalition, based in Austin, Texas. The wide availability of most inhalants could make such instructions more dangerous than with other drugs, he said. "A lot of times kids know about products but they don't know about how to do it." Marlene Williams, coordinator of the Waukesha community action team for Mothers Against Drunk Driving, gasped when the program was described to her. "Kids are so darned curious," she said. Williams, however, stopped short of criticizing the programming, saying she understands how important it is for school officials to educate parents on such delicate issues. But Claudia Roska, executive director of the Waukesha County Council on Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse, commended the district's efforts in exploring alternative ways to reach parents. And she said she doubts airing such details will tell any child something they can't learn elsewhere. "I do believe that parents have a responsibility for being aware of what children are watching," Roska said. "But I also believe that kids that are along that track that are likely to be using inhalants, they'll find out. They're not going to wait for a video." Waukesha School District Superintendent David Schmidt said he had not seen the inhalant program or the marijuana video that preceded it Thursday night. But he said he has encouraged expanded use of cable television by his district. He said he doesn't know how many people are watching the new parent-education programs, which were scheduled Thursday against shows like "Friends," "Whose Line Is It Anyway" and the Fox movie "The Nutty Professor." "Frankly, I didn't know it was airing," Schmidt said of the marijuana and inhalant videos. "There's a lot of things that happen in a district this large that I don't know about. And we have not had anyone raise the issue." Last month, Waukesha Mayor Carol Lombardi decided to pull her prime-time cable call-in show because no one was calling and she wasn't sure anyone was watching. But the Waukesha School District's counseling coordinator for alcohol, tobacco and other drugs, Angela Grenier, said she saw cable as a way to reach out to more parents and teach them about problems affecting teens. Other Issues The parent-education programs also will take on other issues, such as stress management and conflict resolution. Next month, she said, programming will address drunken driving,eating disorders and body image. "That's information that we really want to get out for parents, because we can put a wonderful program on for parents, and we're finding that we're not getting the parents in" for training sessions the district has held, Grenier said. So far, she said, she has received phone calls from five parents who have seen the program, which has been broadcast throughout the month. All the feedback has been positive, she said. Most of the videos that will be aired on the program will come from the School District's current collection and will be something that might be shown to students in a classroom, Grenier said. The inhalant video "is one that is more for parents and that's why, by having the warning at the very beginning, the parents can see that and make the decision for themselves," she said. School Board member Ellen Morris-Gutierrez said she wasn't aware of specific outreach efforts made by the district on cable television. But she said she knew that the district held parent-education meetings in its facilities, and a video showing how to use inhalants would be OK in that setting. With cable television, she acknowledged, it would be possible for children to watch it and "find out how to use inhalants. And that would be unfortunate. And perhaps we would have to reconsider" the program. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst