Pubdate: Thu, 17 Jul 2003 Source: Williams Lake Tribune, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Williams Lake Tribune Contact: http://www.wltribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1226 Author: Gaeil Farrar Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DRUGS AND TEENS; COMMUNITY NEEDS HELP A drug use study conducted by students, and among students at Williams Lake secondary, may not be scientifically accurate but it is a very worthy effort, says principal Joe Pearce. "The fact the kids did it is encouraging. It shows they are interested in important issues that affect them," says Pearce. "It is a far healthier approach than pretending there isn't a problem and sticking one's head in the sand." While the student numbers on drug use are higher than the scientific numbers they have from government agencies, he says the numbers compiled by Frances Enyedy and Sarah Harwood are still alarming and indicate a trend toward more drug use among youth in society. "I haven't done the statistical summary yet but my belief is that drug suspensions will be up this year compared to other years," says Pearce. He also believes there were more suspensions for marijuana use than for alcohol use this past school year. "We have been focusing a great deal on referring students with drug or alcohol problems to counselling and the Revisions youth alcohol and drug program run by Cariboo-Chilcotin Family Resources," says Pearce. "There are lots of educational materials available and I'm not sure if it is a case of kids tuning out or what," he adds. He says factors in the greater society such as the political debate on liberalising marijuana laws may also influence student attitudes toward drugs. "It is not just a school issue. It is a community issue and we have to keep coming at it from that angle," says Pearce. "We are a microcosm of society at large. It doesn't make me happy that it is there, but there it is." School District 27 superintendent Wayne Leckie agrees. "Generally it is a growing concern in North America. This is my seventh school district and every place has had a problem," says Leckie. He also notes that while the survey was conducted in the school with students, the survey is more a reflection of student drug and alcohol use in the larger community. "It is a very small minority of students who would actually be engaged in using drugs or alcohol in the schools," says Leckie. He says the biggest problem is usually with alcohol and marijuana but in Hope, when he was there in the early 1990s, he says there was a great deal of concern over cocaine use, perhaps because that community is at the crossroads of several major highways. He says marijuana use was a bigger problem on the Queen Charlotte Islands when he was there. "My recollection is that there seemed to be a high proportion of marijuana suspensions given the small student population," says Leckie. Schools are trying to deal with a cultural acceptance of drugs which hasn't always been there, says Leckie. "Drugs seem to be more accessible as well as acceptable." For these reasons he says School District 27 is seeking community support for new programs designed to keep drugs out of schools -- drug free zones around schools, more drug awareness education, and personal intervention and support for students with an alcohol or drug problem. He says history has shown that strictly policing doesn't work unless you are in a very oppressive society. "It takes a village to raise a child," Leckie concludes. School District 27 board chair Anne Goyette agrees. "The only thing I can say about drug use is that it is not just a school problem. It is a societal problem." Since schools are places where students congregate they become more obvious targets for drug dealers, she says. "Certainly having the drug free zones around the three high schools should do something to mitigate the problem," says Goyette. She also agrees the school district needs the support of police, parents and the whole community. "We just can't do it by ourselves," says Goyette. She says they have the DARE drug awareness program for elementary schools, and hope to have the PARTY drug awareness program for teens in Williams Lake this fall. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin