Pubdate: Tue, 30 Apr 2002
Source: Daily Item (PA)
Copyright: 2002 The Daily Item
Contact:  http://www.dailyitem.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1045
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

HEROIN

Efforts To Rid Area Of Drug Meet Mixed Results

It has been more than a year since The Daily Item first took an in- depth 
look at the explosion of heroin use in the Central Susquehanna Valley.

A year later, the results of personal, community and law-enforcement 
efforts to rid the area of heroin are mixed.

There have been some success stories: Several addicts profiled in last 
year's series are clean. Law enforcement actions, including the seizure of 
120 bags of heroin in Sunbury late last week, have cut into some of the 
supply of this terribly addictive drug.

The good news, however, comes tempered with signs that the problem cannot 
be "wished" away. Heroin increasingly appears to be the drug of choice for 
a certain segment of the area's young people. Unable to sustain productive 
lives while using the drug, addicts often resort to crime.

In Snyder County, for example, five of seven recent armed robberies 
involved addicts searching for drugs or the money to buy drugs.

Of all the addictive substances floating in and around society today, 
heroin is the most disturbing.

By mimicking the brain's pleasure-producing chemicals, heroin short- 
circuits normal human behavior, replacing love with greed and ambition with 
apathy. Left unchecked, heroin first destroys its users, then their 
families, quickly followed by their communities. Each small white packet 
that arrives from New York, Philadelphia or Reading is a threat to life, 
liberty and happiness for every Valley resident.

Police, prosecutors and prison guards have a role to play in combating 
heroin trafficking. Doctors, therapists and counselors have a role to play 
in healing those wounded by the drug. The front lines of the drug war, 
however, are drawn in each child's home from an early age.

The main weapons are not harsh language and unreasonable expectations. 
Instead, parents and community members can lead children away from 
destructive lifestyles by setting a good example and by remaining involved 
in their everyday lives. Parents also must make a conscious effort to warn 
children - forcefully and consistently - that illegal drugs are illegal for 
very good reasons.

In every life there are choices to make. Heroin is the absolute wrong 
choice. Young people need to be equipped to make the right choice.
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