Pubdate: Thu, 25 Apr 2002 Source: New Jersey Herald (NJ) Copyright: 2002, Quincy Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.njherald.com/news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2162 Author: Kate Brex Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) TECH HOSTS PROGRAM ON DRUG AWARENESS SPARTA -- Drug awareness and teen drug abuse was the message at Sussex County Technical School when the school hosted a intensive two-hour program sponsored by the Sussex County Coalition for Healthy and Safe Families Wednesday. With a relatively sparse turnout of 50 to 60 parents and teens, the coalition, along with the Center for Prevention and Counseling, presented a graphic demonstration of drug use among Sussex County's youth today, which according to coalition coordinator Becky Carlson, amounts to an enormous social and health problem affecting the entire county. "We have three objectives here tonight," said Carlson, "which are, what drugs are most used today, what are club drugs and what do the drugs look like? Where can you go for help?" County Prosecutor Dolores Blackburn, co-founder and chairman of the coalition, spoke with pointed statistics that claim a frightening progression in the use of drugs by the county's youth. "In 1997, we found the first powdered form of heroin in a small package," said Blackburn. "It grew that year, but by 1999 we had 200 similar finds and the rate continues to increase." Blackburn said the death rate from heroin overdoses in the county continues to climb due to the drug's ready availability, low cost, and purity. "It is a popular drug today," she said. "South American cartels have made a business decision to target our children and market heroin instead of cocaine." According to Blackburn, heroin is not what it used to be. The heroin of the '60s and '70s was 30 percent pure, unlike the drug today, which has a 70 percent purity rate, she said. Crime is on the rise in the county as well, due to juveniles burglarizing area homes, she said. Ecstasy, ketamine, LSD, and PCP are readily available within county schools, making drug use more endemic than alcohol abuse. According to coalition Executive Director Barbara Adolphe, candy, Altoids, crushed soda cans, empty water and apple juice bottles, Vicks stick and Vicks vapo rub, cough medicine, Chapstick, vanilla extract bottles, a glow stick, and a pacifier on a string are all signs of teen drug abuse. Ecstasy can be hidden in candy; drugs can be smoked in crushed cans and a liquid drug can be stored in vanilla extract bottles because the brown glass keeps the drug from degrading. Alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana are gateway drugs, she said. "Many people say, 'Thank heavens that my kids are only drinking,'" said Adolphe. "They don't realize that these gateway drugs open the door for the ecstasy, LSD,PCP, and heroin by loosening inhibitions." A slide presentation warned of new drugs to come. "A new drug, Tripstasy, a combination of LSD and Ecstasy is causing much trouble in Ohio right now," said Adolphe. "It should be hitting the Northeast very soon." Leslie Malnak and clients of High Focus, a drug rehabilitation center in Sparta, spoke of the devastation the illness has on the family, demonstrating key symptoms of the disease, such as denial (not my kid) and enabling, which allows people to protect the drug user from negative consequences. Two families currently participating in the High Focus program shared their experience, strength, and hope for recovery citing what parents could do to save their children. A mother said, "Evaluate their friends carefully, be an unpopular mother, be consistent, be a snoop, and if they have a job, find out where they are spending their money." A father's message encouraged everyone in the audience to consider that your child has experimented with drugs already. Adolphe said, "There is no surefire way to keep this from happening, but you can cultivate awareness and there is recovery." Lenape Valley High School student Nicole Spaldo said, "I think there is a drug problem in the county and it won't be stopped unless parents , teachers, and adults in the county are aware of the signs and symptoms of drug and alcohol abuse." The coalition is devoted to bringing community, schools, parents and youth together to prevent alcohol, tobacco and other drug use, as well as the prevention of violence, said a coalition flier. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom