Pubdate: Thu, 3 Oct 2003 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Section: Boston Globe North (An weekly regional section of the Boston Globe) Copyright: 2003 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/news/globe/city_region/globenorth/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Stephanie Chelf, Globe Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) TEENS GET THE STRAIGHT DOPE Drug Offenders Speak At Summit MALDEN -- As part of a new drug education effort, local officials and the Malden High School principal invited a convicted drug dealer to school -- to speak to the kind of kids he used to consider customers. "I would sell to people like you," Alex Rivera, 25, of Chelsea, who's serving a two-year sentence at the Middlesex House of Correction in Billerica for cocaine distribution, told ninth-graders gathered at a summit last week. "I'm not happy for that. I'm very lucky to be here talking to [you]. I lost my freedom for drugs." Also speaking before the students at the high school's drug summit on Friday were another drug convict as well as a 19-year-old heroin addict and her mother, who found her daughter overdosed on the front porch of her home. "The ninth grade is a good age to start" serious drug education, said City Councilor Chris Simonelli, who helped organize the summit with Ward 7 School Committee member Gladys Rivera-Rogers and Malden High School principal Dana Brown. "There's been four deaths [in Malden] this summer from OxyContin," Rivera-Rogers said of the need to hold this forum. While the overdose victims were in their 20s and 30s, Rivera-Rogers and Simonelli agreed it is necessary to get information to students at a young age. The addictive, potent painkiller OxyContin was the primary subject of the summit. Three recovering drug addicts spoke openly about their addictions, which led from marijuana to pills to heroin. "This is just the first [drug summit]; we'd like to have one for every grade level," Simonelli said. Dr. P.S. Kishore, founder of the National Library of Addictions, Malden Police Chief Kenneth Coye, and Middlesex County Sheriff James DiPaola, a graduate of Malden High School and former city police officer, all spoke at the summit. Brown encouraged students to come forward and seek help if they have a drug problem. "This isn't about detention or cutting class," Brown said at the beginning of the summit. "This is about whether someone in this school is going to die, get sick, or go to jail because of drugs." Kimberly Lopresti, 14, said the two-hour summit was moving and informative. "These drugs are addictive. You should avoid drugs," Lopresti said. "I think this will be helpful for us in the years to come," said 14-year-old Joe Sullivan. Freshmen said that hearing from recovering addicts and the inmates had the most impact. "I was surprised they came out and told us what it was like in prison," Lopresti said of the inmates. "They were straight to the point." Rivera-Rogers said in addition to holding a summit for all high school and middle school grades, she would like to have a forum for parents. "Down the road, we want to have a parent forum where parents can hear from other parents who have been through this," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom