Pubdate: Wed, 28 May 2003 Source: Waukesha Freeman (WI) Copyright: 2003 The Waukesha Freeman Contact: (262) 542-8259 Website: http://www.freemanol.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/770 Author: Ryan Amundson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) WILL ANTI-DRUG PROGRAM RETURN? DARE Funding Decision on Hold for Now School, City Budgets Unclear Until Late Summer WAUKESHA - City officials will wait, at least until the end of summer, to decide their future role in paying for the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program. "It is very early and too premature to make any official action on DARE," Mayor Carol Lombardi said Tuesday at the city's finance committee meeting. Committee members unanimously decided to table any action on financing the program until the city and Waukesha School District budgets for next year are more clearly understood. The city and school district split the cost to fund the DARE program this year. City finance director Steve Neaman said the city has spent about $12,500 for the program this year. But in light of massive budget cuts, the school district has proposed to drop its half of the spending. Committee members agreed to take a wait-and-see approach on the issue. "I think we could study this for hours tonight and not have any answers," Charles Betker said. City officials said the school district will have more complete budget numbers from the state in the late summer. The city will work on its budget throughout the summer and finalize a spending plan for 2004 in November. Common council members Kathleen Cummings and Ralph Lapp referred separate items pertaining to the issue to the committee. Lapp stood behind the program but concurred that it was a good idea to hold off on the measure. "It's kind of foolish to make a premature decision before we find out where (the school district) is at," he said. Cummings, whose referral called for outside sources, such as PTAs, to help pay for the school district's portion, pulled her referral from the agenda during the meeting after committee member James Ripplinger called fund raising for the program "inappropriate." Ripplinger said it was not the city's job to secure funding for a school program through solicitation. "Fund solicitation should come from the school district and the school board," he said. "The city should not get involved in the business of the school district. It's totally inappropriate." Cummings said her main purpose for the referral was to make Waukesha residents aware of DARE's questionable future. She had put a June 19 deadline on finding alternate funding sources for the program in an effort to gauge support for the program. "If we don't get a response, it's a clear indication that support is perceived and not actual," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake