Pubdate: Wed, 21 Aug 2002
Source: Buffalo News (NY)
Copyright: 2002 The Buffalo News
Contact:  http://www.buffalonews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61
Author: Greg Toppo, Associated Press

IT'S EASIER TO BUY MARIJUANA THAN CIGARETTES AND ALCOHOL, TEENS SAY

WASHINGTON - Teenagers say marijuana is easier to buy than cigarettes or 
beer - one in three say they can find it in a matter of hours - but only 25 
percent admit trying it, a national survey finds.

When the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse polled 1,000 
teens last winter, 27 percent said they could buy marijuana in an hour or 
less; another 8 percent said it would take a few hours. But for the first 
time since the study began in 1996, teenagers said it was easier to buy 
marijuana than cigarettes or beer.

The annual survey didn't specify whether drugs are easy or difficult to buy 
at school, but 63 percent of students said their schools are "drug-free," 
nearly double the number who said the same in 1998. It's the highest 
percentage since 1996.

While many have criticized nationally used anti-drug programs such as DARE, 
educators said years of using such programs seem to be paying off.

"I think we're starting to see the fruition of some of those programs," 
said Gerald Tirozzi, executive director of the National Association of 
Secondary School Principals.

He said student drug use has been dropping for the past four or five years 
as communities began financing anti-drug programs. "There has been a sense 
that the drug problem, while not solved, has been improving," he said.

More than half of students said they don't drink alcohol in a typical week, 
and about as many said they have never had a drink.

While one in four pupils said at least one of their parents smoke 
cigarettes, 69 percent said they have never smoked.

Joel Willen, principal of Pershing Middle School in Houston, said teachers 
and administrators are seeing less drug activity at school. "I think the 
kids are not bringing whatever it is they're doing, if they're doing it, to 
school," he said.

Pershing's drug-prevention programs are paired with a get-tough policy on 
drugs that includes twice-yearly, random locker and backpack searches by 
drug-sniffing dogs, Willen said. Students caught using or selling drugs can 
be sent to an alternative school or even expelled.

"They know we take a real hard line on drugs," he said.

The survey also found that:

8 percent of students believe there's a teacher at their school who uses 
illegal drugs.

25 percent said they have seen illegal drugs being sold at school.

55 percent said they'd report someone they saw using drugs at school.

56 percent said they'd report someone they saw selling drugs at school, the 
highest level since 1996.

24 percent said drugs are "the most important problem facing people your 
age," highest among several problems such as crime, peer pressure, 
sexuality and the environment.

The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, based at Columbia 
University, polls teenagers on drug use and the presence of drugs in 
schools. This year's random telephone survey of students ages 12 to 17 was 
conducted between Dec. 27 and Feb. 6 by QEV Analytics. It has a margin of 
error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

An accompanying survey of parents found them equally divided on their 
children's drug habits: 44 percent said it's "not very likely" their child 
will ever try illegal drugs, but 43 percent it's "very likely" or "somewhat 
likely" that their kids will try them.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that, by 
the time they complete high school, 47 percent of teenagers have smoked 
marijuana, 24 percent have used another illicit drug, and 81 percent have 
drunk alcohol. The agency also estimates that 70 percent have smoked 
cigarettes.
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