Pubdate: Thu, 20 Apr 2000 Source: Alaska Highway News (CN BC) Copyright: 2000 Sterling Newspapers Ltd. Contact: 9916 - 98 St., Fort St. John, B.C. V1J 3T8 Fax: (250) 785-3522 Website: http://www.sterlingnews.com/Alaska/ DRUG FREE ZONES A GOOD IDEA, BUT NOT ENOUGH Drug Free Zones around local schools are a good start but the whole community has to be part of drug prevention, says a local drug abuse counsellor. "I would like to see family involvement because it's not going to change unless you have family involvement," said Jill Martins, youth services coordinator for the North Peace Alcohol and Drug Counselling Service (NPADCS). Martins is also a member of Urban Hope, a local crime prevention committee. Urban Hope has joined with School District 60 to introduce Drug Free Zones around area schools beginning in September. The program is intended to deter anyone from using or trafficking drugs and to provide students with a safe learning environment by designating each school, and the surrounding two-block radius, as drug free. The zones will be in effect year-round, and anyone caught possessing or trafficking drugs within the zones will be charged. "It's a great step for the community -- they're taking notice that there's a drug problem in this town," Martins said. "One person's drug use affects at least five other people. Unfortunately you can't enforce drug free homes and families." The primary drugs of choice locally are alcohol, marijuana and mushrooms, Martins said, and users fall into four categories: recreational users, regular users, abusers and those who are chemically dependent. "Parents need to know how to how to make sure a recreational user doesn't become anything else," she said. Currently, all students caught violating school drug and alcohol policies are referred to the NPADCS. "I think the schools are doing a good job of enforcing the zero-tolerance policy," Martins said. Both Martins and fellow committee member Lynn Locher, manager of children and family services for the North Peace Community Resources Society, expressed concern that if sentencing under the legal system took several months, it would have little effect in deterring teenagers from ending their drug use. "It would be nice to do the time for the crime when it happens," Martins said. "If the kid is in the addiction phase, that's a great way to get their attention. "The (legal) system takes a long time. Kids are impulsive and immediate, so I think the consequences need to be immediate." Urban Hope chairman Ted Pimm said he will invite a federal Crown Counsel to the committee's next meeting to answer questions. "I want to make sure we have consensus on this before we move ahead," Pimm said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake