Pubdate: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 Source: San Luis Obispo County Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2001 The Tribune Contact: http://www.thetribunenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/391 Author: Jeff Ballinger, The Tribune Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/traffic.htm (Traffic) FIGHTING A WAR 'IN OUR LIVING ROOMS' Parents, Counselors And Others Join Discussion On Kids' Excessive Partying San Luis Obispo -- A parent quoted from an Oscar-winning film about the drug war to describe the local battle, during a panel discussion Monday on drug use by local teens. "'We're fighting this war in our own living rooms,'" said Lori La Vine, borrowing a line from "Traffic." La Vine is co-chair of the Tiger Parent Network, a group of San Luis Obispo High School parents that formed two years ago to address excessive teen partying. The group hosted a panel at the school Monday that featured local people who work with teens and an audience of a little more than 50 people. Assistant principal Will Jones showed the audience some statistics from the recent county survey. More than two-thirds of the 11th-grade students responding said they had used alcohol or other drugs. Coupled with that was a seemingly contradictory statistic: Nearly 80 percent saw such behavior as harmful. "What's up with that?" said Karen Rogers, a counselor with the county's Drug and Alcohol Services who works with students at the school. "That's a function of denial. They do perceive harm, but 'it's not me.'" John Bledsoe, a narcotics officer with the San Luis Obispo Police Department, said he arrested two teens last week selling marijuana on the corner of Chorro and Pacific. He said they were San Luis Obispo residents, but were not students at the high school. "The majority of the problems in kids I see is in the way they were brought up," Bledsoe said, sounding an oft-repeated note Monday about parental responsibility. However, the evening was not a finger-pointing festival at the expense of parents. "In spite of the dreary news, there is hope," Rogers said. "There is treatment." Mary Helt, program coordinator of the Parent Project, said her job is to give parents the tools they need to be able to tell their troubled child, "'Because I love you, I'm going to provide a structured, discipline program for you.'" The project is a collaborative countywide program that offers classes on raising children. Two local parents, Patty and Robbie Robbins, said they took a Parent Project class, but not until their son was already in trouble. They shared how they had to put their son in a residential drug treatment facility to help him with his drug problem. "The biggest mistake we made was getting involved later, rather than earlier," Robbie Robbins said. For more information about Parent Project, contact Helt at 549-6772. Parenting classes are scheduled later this month in every region of the county. The audience also heard some advice from teens, passed along by the panel members. "They want you involved ... and most of all, they want you to care," said Karen Aydelott, of the YMCA and the Mayor's Youth Task Force. Frank Warren, director of Friday Night Live, also had a message from teens. His group is dedicated to increasing the number of students who don't use alcohol or other drugs, and regularly provides activities for high school and middle school students. Students at the high school recently shared a strategy to attract more teens to a healthy lifestyle: "'We should make it more cool and accepted ... and recognize people for just being good people." In response to a question from the audience about the influence of television and movies on their lives and choices, Warren said, "Young people consistently say it doesn't matter as much as what Mom or Dad does." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D