Pubdate: Sat, 19 Oct 2002 Source: Desert Sun, The (CA) Copyright: 2002 The Desert Sun Contact: http://www.thedesertsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112 Author: Francesca Donlan VALLEY HAS NO PLACE FOR TEENS TO GO FOR TREATMENT While the Coachella Valley boasts one of the country's most renowned adult drug and alcohol treatment centers -- there is no place for teenagers to get help. No single residential treatment center exists for children under 18 in Riverside or San Bernardino counties. "There is a definite need," said Jim Rothblatt, student assistance program specialist for Desert Sands Unified School District. "We have enough young people to fill a place up, but we don't have the financial backing to access service." It's a concern for many in the valley who deal with adolescents. "There is no place for someone's 16-year-old son who is smoking crack in high school," said Rick Mesa, executive director for Ranch Recovery Centers Inc., a drug and alcohol treatment facility in Palm Springs. "It's an incredibly serious problem. What they are really saying is wait until they get to be adults, arrested, and then we'll send them to an adult program." Rebecca Hyatt, the executive director at the Counseling Center in Palm Springs, sees many children struggling with addiction. "Teenagers who have a problem could care less what they put in their bodies," she said. "A little of this, a little of that -- they go to school loaded." Some families take out loans to send their children to residential programs like they would for college, she said. "For people who don't have the money, it's a sad problem," she said. Younger and younger: And it gets sadder when you find out how old some of these children are, she said. "Every once in a while, a 10-year-old will tell me he has been drinking for a year and smoking pot," Hyatt said. "It's starting so young. Sixth-grade kids already experiencing drugs --some kids by the time they're 13 have tried 10 different kinds of drugs." "Money is one of the stumbling blocks for getting kids residential treatment," said Jim Powell, mental health services supervisor for Riverside County. "It's a challenging process to get an adolescent treatment facility up and running," he said. "Many people don't want it in their backyard. And it's not a cheap proposition to run. Our budget is getting cut as we speak." The county lacks money to maintain a treatment center. And it lacks money to help families send their children to residential programs outside the county, he said. Maria Lozano, behavioral health supervisor for Riverside County Department of Mental Health Substance Abuse Program, is also concerned about the lack of residential programs. "Funding continues to be a major issue," she said. "We're hoping somewhere down the line we can secure a residential program." The county program does offer outpatient programs and many of the clients do well, she said. "We're able to keep a child in the house and deal with the problem," she said. "That's not to say that can't be done in a residential program but we do the next best thing." Kids who have money can be placed in private treatment centers in Orange County or Los Angeles County. But the kids who don't have any money have to wait until they are 18. `Nightmare': "It's a parent's nightmare," said Jan Ryan, liaison for school safety and risk reduction at the Riverside County Office of Education. Ryan wants to get kids off drugs as quickly as possible. She has seen first-hand the ripple effect a sober adolescent has on his or her peers. "The kids in recovery come back to the high school and kids see you can recover," she said. "I see a lot of hopelessness when kids worry about other kids. When someone has a problem and they come back into the school system and is positively changed -- that gives them hope." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens