Pubdate: Sat, 29 Apr 2000 Source: Ames Tribune (IA) Copyright: 2000 Iowa Newspapers Inc. Contact: (515) 232-2364 Address: 317 Fifth St., P.O. Box 380, Ames, Iowa 50010. Website: http://www.amestrib.com/index.cfm Author: Rebecca Anderson SURVEY: STORY COUNTY YOUTH DRUG USE BELOW STATE AVERAGE AMES--The number of Story County youth who use tobacco, alcohol and other drugs is below state averages. Youth leaders and counselors say the news is good but say there's more work to be done. Youth and Shelter Services Director George Belitsos said whichever way you look at the results, sometimes "the glass is either half empty or half full." Some say the statistics are a reflection of Story County's white-collar population or the local support for prevention programs and the home of the largest youth rehabilitation center in the state, Youth and Shelter Services. Others say the statistics aren't a good indicator of the truth. According to the survey completed by the University of Iowa in 1999: 38 percent of Story County youth have used alcohol; 24 percent of Story County youth have used tobacco; 18 percent of Story County youth have used drugs. The statewide average youth tobacco use is 33 percent; alcohol use is 47 percent and drug use is 21 percent. "I think it speaks well of our community," Belitsos said. The numbers are encouraging to YSS Community Youth and Family Development Coordinator Jody Kammin, who works closely with youth in Story County school districts. To Kammin, the numbers show that few kids are using tobacco. Kammin coordinates the "Few Do" smoking prevention program. Through billboards, book covers and flyers, the program attempts to show youth that smoking isn't as popular as some youth think it is, by emphasizing that in 1998, 85 percent of local youth did not smoke. The newest survey reports that 89 percent of youth did not use tobacco in the past 30 days when they were surveyed. "It shows the program is working; something is helping," Kammin said. One Ballard High School senior said the statistics don't tell the real story. Toby Bartlett, of Huxley, is 19-years-old and quit his one pack-a-week smoking habit eight months ago. He estimates that 40 percent of his classmates smoke and 70 percent drink alcohol. As for drug use, he said, use of Ballard's most common drug (in his opinion), marijuana, is down. "I didn't think the statistics were really true," Bartlett said. "They're not very accurate." Bartlett said he is using the survey to facilitate communication between his classmates on the problems they face. "Awareness has gone up but I think it needs to go up more," Bartlett said. Story County Juvenile Court Services handled 167 cases in 1999 that were drug- and alcohol-related, compared to the 212 in 1998, according to Director Tom Southard. "We have a pretty white collar, pretty educated county," Southard said. "We have a lot of effort put into prevention and I think it's a payoff. "It's a community where parents are pretty well-educated." Belitsos said YSS workers will use the statistics to further attack the problem. The numbers will be used to modify prevention programs, apply for grants and target sectors of children that need help. "It's a big step because it tells us we're in the right direction," Belitsos said. "But there are too many kids who are throwing their life away." About the survey The Iowa Youth Survey was prepared by the Iowa Consortium for Substance Abuse Research and Evaluation at the University of Iowa in 1999. The group sought input from all school districts and all students in grades six through 12 in every Iowa county. The group also compiled data from alternative schooling programs. Survey questionnaires were completed in 329 of Iowa's 375 school districts for a total of 85,552 responses statewide. Colo-Nesco was the only school district in Story county that did not participate. The survey was funded by the Iowa Department of Public Health, division of substance abuse and health promotion; the Iowa Department of Education; Governor's Alliance on Substance Abuse; Department of Human Rights, Criminal and Juvenile Justice Planning and Statistical Analysis Center; The Higher Plain Inc. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk