Pubdate: Mon, 19 May 2003 Source: Carroll County Times (MD) Copyright: 2003 Carroll County Times Contact: http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1524 Author: Jamie Kelly, Times Staff Writer YOUTHS LEARN DRUG DANGERS Teens who talk to an adult when they are troubled are less likely to use alcohol, and local police are doing what they can to make themselves available to teens. The National Household Survey on Drug Abuse released a study showing that youngsters who were willing to go to their parents or another adult with concerns about a serious problem were 10 percent less likely to have drunk alcohol recently. But police can't force parents to get involved, so law enforcement does its part to reach out to youths who might be in danger of falling prey to alcohol or drug abuse, said Sgt. Mike Bible, community education officer for the Westminster city police. Bible said he helps with three programs to educate teens about drugs and alcohol and ways to avoid them. One program is Drug Abuse Resistance Education, which he teaches to sixth-graders. That program is designed to give youngsters strategies that can help them stay away from drugs and alcohol, he said. Another program is a talk he gives to fifth-graders about the dangers of drug and alcohol abuse. The students have the chance to enter a poster contest, and the winning design gets put on a billboard, he said. The third program is Reality, a class that's given as an alternative sentence to young people caught with alcohol or drugs. The class, which is held on four consecutive Fridays, gives students hard facts about the effects of drugs, alcohol and overdoses, the dangers of drunken driving and the potential legal consequences of drug and alcohol abuse. Bible said students also have to write out what their goals are for the future. Then they're asked to write letters to people who have helped them achieve their goals in the past. Most program participants are between the ages of 15 and 21, Bible said. In the four years the class has been available, 837 young people have graduated, Bible said. Only 3 percent of those have run into more trouble with drugs or alcohol, he said. Taneytown Police Chief Bill Tyler said his department also goes in to schools to tell students about the dangers of alcohol and drug use. He said he also has his officers talk to young people they see on the street. He said teens don't want to be preached to, so just telling them not to drink or do drugs won't work. Instead, he said, he tries to discuss with them the pros and cons of drinking and drug use. And, he said, he hasn't heard a single pro in all his years of police work. The education is important, Tyler said - without it, enforcement wouldn't accomplish much. And, he said, education can be much more effective. "If we can get [the young people] to think about the advantages and disadvantages, we've won," Tyler said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake