Pubdate: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 Source: Morning Call (PA) Copyright: 2003 The Morning Call Inc. Contact: http://www.mcall.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/275 Author: Jeff Christman Note: The author is a freelance writer OFFICIALS MUM ON DRUG AGENCY'S FUNDING Carbon Has No Answer For Nonprofit Involved In Condom Debate. Carbon County commissioners on Thursday refused to act on a request to fund a multicounty drug and alcohol organization that raised their ire in August when a prevention worker allegedly gave a 13-year-old girl a condom in a playground where younger children were playing. The commissioners fell silent when county Administrator Randy Smith presented the board with the Carbon-Monroe-Pike Drug and Alcohol Commission's request for $9,298 from fines the county collected from people convicted of drunken driving. An official from the agency said it faces ''disastrous'' cutbacks without the money. None of the three commissioners offered a motion to grant or reject the request after Smith read it. After moments of silence, Smith moved on to the next item on the agenda. The drug and alcohol commission is a private, nonprofit group licensed by the state Department of Health. The commission has an office on S. First Street in Lehighton. After the meeting, Commissioner Tom Gerhard said he believes the county should keep the money. He said it could be used to help offset residents' tax bills. The agency drew criticism from the commissioners - particularly Gerhard - in August because of its condom distribution program. Monroe County temporarily halted the program - intended to teach 13- to 18-year-olds about AIDS and the risk of contracting HIV, the virus that causes the disease - after Gerhard said the 13-year-old's mother reported the girl had been given the condom. Gerhard at the time said he was appalled and called the distribution ''a sick policy.'' The outreach program later was suspended indefinitely, drug and alcohol commission director Richard Mroczka said. Reached at the organization's Monroe office after the Carbon meeting, Mroczka reacted with disbelief to the commissioners withholding funds. Mroczka said the organization, which has served the area for more than 25 years, needs the money to continue its programs in Carbon. He said all the money it gets from Carbon is spent in the county for drug and alcohol prevention, intervention and treatment programs, especially at the prison. If the commissioners never act on the request, he said it would be the first time the county has withheld the money in about 15 years. By law, he said, a quarter of fines the county collects should be allocated for education, treatment and prevention programs. ''It's kind of shock here, and I'd like to take a look at this and talk with the commissioners,'' he said. The drug and alcohol commission also uses the money it gets from member counties to develop education initiatives, such as the Drug and Alcohol Resistence Education, or DARE, program. But Gerhard said Thursday he doesn't believe that work is effective as a deterrent. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart