Pubdate: Sun, 18 Jun 2000 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Copyright: 2000 The Boston Herald, Inc. Contact: One Herald Square, Boston, MA 02106-2096 Website: http://www.bostonherald.com/ Author: Kay Lazar TEENS BATTLE ADDICTION Bay State Doubles Treatment Centers Two years ago, Annmarie was a happy, North Shore 16-year-old, with good grades and plans for college. Today she is a high school dropout and a recovering heroin addict. And all it took to get her hooked was one snort of a single, half-inch-long line of beige powder - heroin her 18-year-old boyfriend offered one night when they were hanging out. "It didn't look like it could do any harm," said Annmarie, who asked that her last name not be printed. "I just wanted to try it to see what the big deal was." For experts battling a burgeoning heroin problem in Massachusetts, the "big deal" is a new report that suggests there are many more teenagers out there like Annmarie. The study, from the state's Department of Public Health, said that heroin has now surpassed cocaine as the top drug on the streets, and that "anecdotal reports from police and treatment contacts suggest that heroin snorting has increased among high school youth." Hoping to head off a flood of new drug addicts, the state is doubling - - from three to six - its number of residential teen treatment centers, with the last one scheduled to open in Western Massachusetts this fall. Annmarie is in the newest center, called the Rebound Adolescent and Family Treatment Center, which sits in Boston Harbor, on Long Island. Designed for intensive treatment of 22 teenagers, the center, which opened in May, is already half full. And nearly half of those teenagers are in treatment for heroin addictions, according to the center's director. "The kids' average drug usage before here was two years, on and off, and they might have been using heavy for about the past two to six months," said Earl Dandy. The faces at Project Rebound are as fresh as the new cornflower blue paint on the walls. Here, recovering teen addicts attend school classes part of the day and go to one-one-one or group counseling the rest. The three-month program, Dandy said, is designed to add discipline and stability to young lives that have been upended by drugs. For Annmarie, the road to Rebound was preceeded by a dizzying six months that included a stint at an adult halfway house - because Massachusetts has lacked facilities for teens - and two trips through detox. More stable now than she has been since getting hooked on heroin, Annmarie is finally able to dream, again, about the future. She wants to get her high school diploma, go to college and one day counsel others. "I never thought I'd be sitting in a treatment program," she said. "I always thought I'd get to graduate with my class. That was last weekend. And I didn't get to go to my senior prom." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson