Pubdate: Fri, 14 Dec 2001 Source: Birmingham News (AL) Copyright: 2001 The Birmingham News Contact: http://www.al.com/bhamnews/bham.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Author: Jon Anderson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) HOOVER STUDENT DRUG USE FALLS Some Say Programs Pay Off As Fewer Choose To Imbibe Drug use among students in Hoover city schools has dropped significantly over the past 12 years, according to a survey released Thursday. Fewer students in the seventh, ninth and 11th grades reported drinking beer and smoking cigarettes and marijuana than students in those grades did in 1989, according to the survey of Hoover students conducted in the spring. The 2001 survey was given to about 1,700 randomly selected students in the sixth through 12th grades, but comparison questions from 1989 were only available for the seventh, ninth and 11th grades. According to this year's survey, the use of liquor has decreased in the seventh and ninth grades. The number of 11th-graders who said they had drunk liquor in the three months preceding the survey increased, however, from about 40 percent in 1989 to 42.9 percent in 2001. The strongest improvement was at the ninth-grade level, where 75.4 percent of students said they had not drunk beer in the past three months, compared to 53 percent in 1989. The number of ninth-graders who said they had not smoked cigarettes in the past three months increased from 61 percent to 80.7 percent, and the number of ninth-graders who said they had not drunk liquor over that time rose from 58 percent to 75.4 percent. Few students reported using "hard" drugs. For example, 99.5 percent of seventh-graders, 96.9 percent of ninth-graders and 95.1 percent of 11th-graders said they had not used cocaine in the past three months. Comparison data from 1989 was not available for that question. The 2001 survey numbers are slightly skewed because they don't include students attending Hoover's Crossroads alternative school, where students reported more drug use. However, the percentages couldn't be more than 5 percent off because of the small student population at Crossroads, said Hayden Center, a substance abuse prevention expert hired to conduct the study. Center said there's no scientific way to explain the significant improvements since 1989, but it appears the multiple education and prevention programs implemented by the schools and community are having an effect. Former Hoover Mayor Frank Skinner in 1989 appointed a drug prevention task force that was headed by the current mayor, Barbara McCollum, when she was a councilwoman. The same year, the Hoover school system hired Anne Hartline as its safe and drug-free schools coordinator, and in 1991 the Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Community Advisory Team was formed. Over the years, the two groups, which eventually merged, started many anti-drug initiatives, including parenting seminars, community rallies, drug-free activities for teens and a Peer Helper program in which students encourage other students not to use drugs. The Hoover Police Department started a Drug Awareness and Resistance Education program in 1990 as well. Children participating in city sports leagues sign commitments to remain free of drugs and alcohol. In 1997, the Hoover City Council banned cigarette vending machines from the city. The school board, in 2000, adopted a drug-testing policy for athletes, becoming the first school system in the state to test students for tobacco use. Janet Windle, executive director of the American Lung Association of Alabama, said the Hoover community has gone a long way toward changing behavior norms for teens, especially when it comes to drugs. "It's just not the cool thing to do," Ms. Windle said. "That sounds sort of trite sometimes, but when they hear it as much as they do here, that affects their behavior and their perception." The study also revealed that 15.6 percent of the students indicated they had seriously considered suicide in the past 12 months. Nationally, the number is 20 percent. About 2.8 percent of the Hoover students said they actually attempted suicide in the previous 12 months, compared to 8 percent of students nationally. No student in the Hoover school system has committed suicide since 1990, school officials said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth