Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jul 2001 Source: Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal (MS) Copyright: 2001 Journal Publishing Company Contact: http://www.djournal.com/djournal/site/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/823 Author: Sandi Pullen EARLY PREVENTION TAAP Program Teaches Teens Medical Dangers Of Drug Use And Addiction In an effort to teach teen-agers about the dangers of drugs, the Teen Addiction Awareness Program is now being offered to juvenile offenders at the Lee County Juvenile Detention Center. "It's a concentrated program of intensive educational and prevention and intervention teaching on the realities of illegal drug and alcohol abuse," said Dody Vail, executive director of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence of Northeast Mississippi. NCADD sponsors the TAAP program. The program was brought to the jail at the request of Youth Court Judge James Floyd, Administrator David Anthony and the late Sheriff Harold Ray Presley, said Vail. Classes began at 6 p.m. this past Monday, under the instruction of Porter McKee. "I'm teaching about addiction and the medical model," McKee said. "Drug abuse is a physical disease that affects the mind and the nervous system." The class teaches about gateway drugs, said McKee. "Smoking is a gateway to drinking, drinking is a gateway to marijuana use and marijuana is a gateway to cocaine," McKee said. "They're starting to experiment with drugs at their age." McKee said a few students, after completing the course, went on to join mentor programs with the Tupelo Police Department and the Tupelo Fire Department. At any given time, said McKee, there are 10 to 15 students in each class. TAAP is a confidential program, and students' names and information are not released. "If they're released (from detention) prior to finishing the program, we want to try to keep them with this same group," said Jail Administrator Robin Cobb. "If they fail to do that, they will be ordered by the judge to finish the course. We hope to make that part of the release agreement." Cobb said she chose the teens in the current class based on the amount of time they were ordered to spend in detention. "It's a welcome respite from the usual daily routine, as their day (in detention) is pretty predictable and boring," Vail said. "Any teen that the juvenile detention center administrator thinks this would help is put in the class, because 85 percent of all juvenile crimes are alcohol or drug related. In the adult jail, it's 95 percent." Vail obtained a grant to fund the course, Cobb said. "One of the counseling aspects of the program is that the kids find a class a safe environment," Vail said. "We can find out what's really going on with them, their frustrations and fears, and where their anger comes from. A close bond is usually forged between the student and the teacher." Cobb said the teens are shackled at their ankles but not monitored by guards during the class. "It's more like an educational curriculum," Vail said. "The teacher teaches. It's interactive between the students and the teacher." The workbook used, "Young, Sober and Free," contains stories about teen-agers on the brink or in the middle of a full-blown addiction, who came back to live full, productive lives, Vail said. "They're given a bracelet, a woven bracelet, that says 'Think first'," Vail said. "It's supposed to inspire them by the name of it to think first on what they've learned when they're out of the detention center and faced with some temptations." NCADD developed the program five years ago after taking a poll to find out the needs of teen-agers. "It showed that there was a gap in services for teens who had a beginning brush with the youth courts," Vail said. "Obviously, we needed a program that would nip those budding problems. The goal of TAAP is to prevent kids from heading into full-blown addiction at an early age and help them to make better life choices." Regular TAAP courses are offered at the NCADD building on Spring Street in downtown Tupelo for anyone who wants to attend, Vail said. "And it's all confidential," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe