Pubdate: Wed, 03 Dec 2003 Source: Kane County Chronicle (IL) Copyright: 2003 Kane County Chronicle Contact: http://www.kcchronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3178 Author: Heath Hixson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) OFFICER DEFENDS DARE PROGRAM ST. CHARLES - Police officer Jeff Finley has been teaching drug and violence prevention to fifth-graders for several years. Finley teaches the Drug Abuse Resistance Education programs in St. Charles elementary schools. But after four years of teaching children to just say "no," Finley is in the precarious position of defending the program's effectiveness. The St. Charles school district will form a panel early next year to analyze whether the program meets its goals and if the district can justify funding the program for another year. Finley questions how critics can measure the effectiveness of the program. "What is effective?" he said. "For it to work does nobody have to be arrested. ... It is a cop-out for giving a reason for not wanting to pay for something." The DARE program is taught at schools by police officers nationwide and in all 12 St. Charles district elementary schools. The district and the city split the program's cost in five elementary schools within the city's boundaries. The program's goal is to teach children to resist the pressures to use drugs and alcohol. District officials cite recent studies that have questioned whether the program meets its goal to prevent abuse. Skeptics say the research shows that the program is effective in telling children about drugs, but might lag in getting them to refuse drugs and alcohol when faced with the choice. "When you look at the research, at the end of the day, it is not effective in preventing drug use," Stacy Anderson, the district's student assistance coordinator, previously said. But Finley questions the research and says the program prepares children for the world they are about to step into when they reach middle school. He says the program plants a seed at a young age about the negative consequences of drug abuse and contributes to crime prevention. While Finley admits that he has arrested his own previous students, he still says the program's preventive goal "is almost like a commercial, 'you can pay me now or pay me later.'" One of the program's 45-minute classes, which are taught once a week for 17 weeks, brings high school students into the classroom to tell the younger students about the pressures they face and why they say "no." Pat Martin, 16, a St. Charles East High School junior who related his experiences to a DARE class Tuesday at Munhall Elementary School, said talking to the students gives him a chance to help younger children. "Even if I tell one kid, isn't that enough?" he said. "I don't think you can measure the success. It is just what they get out of it." The district now is forming the committee. The panel's work is not expected to start until January or February. School officials said if DARE is taken out of schools, a similar program would replace it. Finley said the police department might have to conduct fund-raisers to support the program if district funding ends. "I think the whole thing about it is to prepare our kids for what is about to come," he said. "I guess my big hope is that they make less bad decisions." The future of DARE in district schools in unincorporated Kane County also is in jeopardy. Sheriff Ken Ramsey has requested that the Kane County board's Executive Committee fund his program with a $15,000 riverboat grant. The panel denied that request Nov. 5. But the Corrections and Rehabilitation Committee voted Nov. 20 to fund Ramsey's program at $6,500. The Executive Committee is expected to revisit the request today. Not to be outdone, the board's Public Safety Committee debated the program Tuesday. Chairman Lee Barrett, R-East Dundee, asked members to investigate other anti-drug programs. But Dorothy Sanchez, D-Aurora, argued that the county board should not decide what programs schools should teach. "I feel it is inappropriate for us to be discussing this. We cannot dictate to the school systems what program they should use," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh