Pubdate: Thu, 06 Jun 2002 Source: American Press (LA) Copyright: 2002 Shearman Corporation Contact: http://www.americanpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/926 Author: Vincent Lupo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) PUPILS HOPE THEIR PETITION CAN SAVE DRUG EDUCATION PROGRAM Besides teaching children to say "No" to drugs, the D.A.R.E. program also helps kids learn self-help skills such as making good decisions, resisting peer pressure and standing up for one's own beliefs.. Recent Drug Abuse Resistance Education graduates Sara Johnston and Alicia Guidry are applying those principles by staging their own protest of proposals to cut funding for the D.A.R.E. program. The girls heard "rumors" that the $3.8 million the state provides to held fund D.A.R.E. would not be budgeted next year. Thus, the funding cut would effectively kill D.A.R.E. in Louisiana's public and private schools since the state provides $10 per student for the program. The girls, who just completed fifth grade at Kaufman Elementary, questioned their D.A.R.E. instructor, Lake Charles Police Sgt. Mary Reinecke, and she confirmed the rumors. They also learned that in addition to killing the $3.8 million earmarked for D.A.R.E., the state had set aside $3.9 million for the new NBA franchise, the New Orleans Hornets. The girls decided to take action themselves to educate the public about the situation. Using skills they learned from D.A.R.E. as well as from Girl Scouts to which they both belong, Sara and Alicia decided to launch a petition-signing campaign. They first obtained the names of students and staff members from their school. That petition, with 250 signatures, was to be transported by Reinecke to Baton Rouge where she was scheduled to lobby legislators Wednesday for approval of a new proposal geared at saving D.A.R.E. That proposal calls for a portion of an increased cigarette tax to replace the lost funding for D.A.R.E. Although the bill had stalled in the House of Representatives, Reinecke is hopeful it will pass both legislative chambers later in the session. Meanwhile Sara and Alicia have expanded their cause and are obtaining signatures on a second petition. They took their crusade to the parish courthouse Wednesday and plan to sign people up this Sunday at Sara's church, Sale Street Baptist. Those petitions will also be sent to the legislature, Reinecke said. Prior to leaving for Baton Rouge, Reinecke said Wednesday that Gov. Mike Foster's administration deleted D.A.R.E. funding from the state budget for fiscal year 2002-2003 claiming that D.A.R.E. doesn't work. But, Reinecke, refutes that claim and points to a study requested by the legislature in 2000. The findings of that study, conducted by Robert J. Landry, Ed.D. of Research and Educational Services, Inc. of Pasadena, Texas, indicated that students who received D.A.R.E. were: . Less likely to use drugs. . Talked to parents more. . Less likely to be involved in violent behavior. . Less likely to join gangs. The report represents a survey of 4,052 Louisiana students conducted between Jan. 8-Feb. 21, 2001. The survey sample comprised the following three groups of students: . D.A.R.E. Core (elementary) subjects. . Junior high D.A.R.E. subjects . non-D.A.R.E. subjects. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel