Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY) Copyright: 2002 Messenger-Inquirer Contact: http://www.messenger-inquirer.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285 Author: David Blackburn MUHLENBERG SCHOOL BOARD TO REVIEW D.A.R.E. PROGRAM, MORE The Muhlenberg County school board is expected to talk today about upgrading the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program, two high school agriculture programs and three buildings. During a special meeting at 5 p.m. at the Central Office in Powderly, the board also is scheduled to hear proposals designed to improve employee absenteeism. County D.A.R.E. instructor Keith Whitehouse resigned July 5. The board today will discuss how, or whether, to change or broaden the program's focus. D.A.R.E. classes were taught to about 900 Muhlenberg County students - -- all sixth-graders and some fifth-graders -- this past school year. Adding one or two part-time D.A.R.E. officers in addition to a new full-time officer is possible, said Superintendent Dale Todd. That would allow the program to be taught in other grades and would lessen the load on the one instructor, Todd said. The board is scheduled to award contracts for the construction of two 30-by-60-foot greenhouses with heating systems and insulated storage rooms at Muhlenberg North and South high schools. The greenhouses will be used for horticulture classes to teach students about alternatives to dwindling tobacco production, said Darrell Simpson, the county's extension agent for agriculture and natural resources. "There's a potential the horticulture industry could come about in the county, as well as the state," Simpson said. Simpson is the facilitator for the county's Phase I Agriculture Council, which recommends uses of the state's tobacco settlement funds to the Governor's Office of Agricultural Policy. That office has earmarked $98,679 for the projects, said Jeff Travis, the school system's finance officer. That will cover most of the cost, and the board has approved paying the rest, Travis said. The board will also award the contract to paint Longest Elementary School, Kentucky Tech vocational school and the district's maintenance building a tannish-gray to match the new Muhlenberg North Middle School. Todd said he will outline to the board an employee incentive plan similar to those used to try to lower student absenteeism. A teacher or administrator who doesn't miss a day, take a sick day or a personal day would get his or her name included in a year-end drawing for a prize -- possibly a TV, Todd said. A similar drawing would be done for classified workers, he said. "At a couple of our schools (during the 2001-02 year), teacher attendance was worse than the students," Todd said. Travis said the employee absenteeism was about five percent, which was about average for other school districts in the region. The school system has about 440 certified employees and about 360 classified workers, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart