Pubdate: Sun, 13 Apr 2003 Source: Kenora Enterprise (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Kenora Enterprise Contact: http://www.kenoraenterprise.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2358 Author: Jim Blight, Publisher Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) CITY DRUG USE ENCOURAGED BY SLUGS AND SLIME A recent conversation with a friend has troubled me greatly. He learned that his 13-year-old youngster was experimenting with drugs with his newfound friends. My opinions of drugs aside, this is serious -- especially for youngsters under 16. How should a parent react? When you are with the in-crowd, doing a toke outside the school, a kid feels cool and with it. Being part of the cool guys is a really big deal. Not cool, fool. Unfortunately, you can't make a kid understand the reality of the situation. That is, they are sheep being led down the garden path. In reality, their leader is a loser, destined for bigger things, like brain damage, unemployment, seclusion, paranoia or perhaps a lucrative career as a drug pusher. Often, the only way the leader of the pack has friends is buying them with free drugs. They don't have the personality to make friends otherwise. And the friendship is a perceived one. In reality, the free drugs they are getting are an investment in securing a long-term customer. Drug use in Kenora is reaching epidemic proportions among the young. Prices are such that kids can afford even the most addictive products like crack cocaine. Marijuana is more expensive but still within the reach of a kid with five bucks in his or her pocket. Drug experimentation among the early teens and 'tweens (nine to 12 years) scares me. There is still a lot of development going on in the minds and bodies of these kids and any impediment to that development can have life-long repercussions. Realize that the brain works on chemical impulses and drugs cause the interactions to be interrupted and modified. I'm not a scientist, but it seems obvious to me. But not to worry. Things like this only occur in other people's families, right. Wrong. At a seminar on Wednesday evening, the Tri-Force drug group brought some citizens up to speed on the local drug scene. Scary stuff. But most of it was a confirmation of what we have seen ourselves and heard from our readers. Yes, drugs are readily available in Kenora. Yes, there are kids starting to do drugs at age 10-years-old or younger. Yes, it is in the junior highs and solidly entrenched in the high schools. Yes, the teachers are helpless to prevent it based on legal restrictions. Many in Kenora have places in their neighbourhoods where kids are seen coming and going on a regular basis. The police are aware of some of these drug outlets but the legal system makes it difficult to gather sufficient evidence to prosecute. But the police encourage you to call them or CrimeStoppers. Compounding the issue, society has made it all but impossible for parents to control their kids. A call from your offspring to police or a child welfare agency causes parents to be treated like criminals, even before an investigation takes place. Proper discipline is being regulated out of existence. What it comes down to is that parents must do their own policing in spite of the restrictions. Those in the know offer this advice: Know where your kids are and whom they are hanging with. Maintain contact with the parents of their friends. Check up on your kids. If they are going on a sleepover, confirm with the parents that there will be adult supervision. Maintain communication with your kid's teachers. A major flag of a drug problem is falling marks and truancy problems at school. And if your child starts hanging around with a new group of friends, be careful. Let me tell you some scary stories, stories that you would expect to hear in major cities like Winnipeg, which has a major child pornography and child prostitution problem. Kenora is not exempt! Kids are offering their bodies in exchange for drugs. Local teens and tweens are being used for transporting drugs from Winnipeg because, as young offenders, they are safe from the law. They are giving up their souls and their bodies to the habit, before they are old enough to understand the implications of their decision. Others are stealing from local stores and homes to pay for their habit. There are ways to find out for sure if your child is doing drugs. Maybe the way he or she reacts when questioned about drug use. Find out the behavioral ticks that could indicate drug use. Drug testing at the medical clinic is possible. Lo-Cost pharmacy among others sell a home drug test kit which will test for marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, PCP and heroin among others. The cost is about $30. Drug residue stays in your system for three weeks or more. But regardless of tests, police say that the best way of controlling your child's exposure to drugs, especially up to age 16, is just ensuring that you "know where your kids are tonight." Maintain communication with teachers and other parents so you know what is happening in the community. Finally, maintain pressure on the city, the provincial government and the schools to provide the outlets for kids at all skill levels, not just the more athletic. With cutbacks to funding for intramural school activities and disputes between school boards, government and teachers, the average teenager is being excluded from sports and other after-school clubs. User pay in sports means that some families just can't afford to have their kids participate in some sports. Maybe the key is not prosecution, but prevention through participation. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl