Pubdate: Mon, 12 Jan 2004 Source: New Jersey Herald (NJ) Copyright: 2004, Quincy Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.njherald.com/news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2162 Author: Jennifer Lilly ANDOVER TOWNSHIP POLICE HEAD BACK INTO SCHOOLS TO RUN D.A.R.E. When Phillip Coleman became chief of the Andover Township Police Department, he dared his officers to become more involved in the community. Now local schools will reap the benefit from officers who met that challenge. "I felt we needed to get back into the schools," Coleman said. Coleman, who has been chief since March, said one of his first goals was to get an officer in his department trained to run the Drug Abuse Resistance Education Program in the Andover Regional School. He asked for volunteers and two officers were chosen - Patrolman Gil Taglialatela and Patrolman Rod Mosner. "I want the kids to recognize them (the officers) and know who they are," Coleman said. As the senior officer, Taglialatela received D.A.R.E. training first. He attended a two-week training course in Bergen County to learn how to teach in the classroom. The program, designed to teach children how to avoid drugs and alcohol, is slated to begin at Long Pond School in February. It will consist of one 45-minute class a week for 10 weeks. For the first year, the class will only be offered to the sixth grade, but it may branch out to the fifth grade and possibly even second-graders in the coming years, Taglialatela said. The program was previously run by the Sussex County Sheriff's Office. The Sheriff's Office began the program in the late 1980s, said Chief Michael Reich. "We used to do everybody, but the past year or two, they have been phasing in their own (officers), which is good," Reich said. Both the children and the officers benefit from a localized D.A.R.E. program, Reich said. Children get the chance to meet the officers and get to know them and it's good for the officers to learn about the children as well, he said. "And it's a good thing because it takes the pressure off of us," Reich said. Lafayette, Frankford, Wantage, Sussex Christian, Ogdensburg, Montague and Sandyston are the only schools that still use the Sheriff' s Department D.A.R.E. program, he said. Coleman said D.A.R.E. isn't the only community outreach program the Andover Police Department is involved in. The department also offers Safety Town, a program designed to teach pre-kindergarten children the importance of traffic signs and regulations, as well as a Halloween Safety course. Officers also perform daily security checks of both schools, he said. Taglialatela has been involved in various school education programs for the past 14 years and said he enjoys working with the young children. Even if children don't know a particular officer, they will recognize the uniform, so being out in schools helps the local children relate better to the police department. Taglialatela often has children approach him when he's off-duty because they remember him from school programs. "They recognize your face; they even know where you live," he said with a laugh. Taglialatela said other than expanding to more grades, the department is also considering a parent education program if local parents are interested, he said. "Input from parents would be great," Taglialatela said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake