Pubdate: Sun, 18 Jan 2004 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2004 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Jason Burke DRUGS PLAN FOR SCHOOLS ABANDONED Key Education Advisers Are Laid Off In Cash Crisis Confusion Over Dangers As Cannabis Is Reclassified A key plank of the Government's drugs strategy to warn young people of the dangers of cannabis is set to collapse due to a funding shortfall, The Observer can reveal. At least half of Britain's 150 school drugs advisers, who are seen as a critical part of a Government bid to stem the rising tide of drug misuse by young people, will be made redundant after central government funding for their posts ends in April. The Government had hoped local education authorities would then fund the jobs but, with the continuing cash crisis in education, many LEAs have insufficient resources to take on the new burden. The news comes just over a week before cannabis is reclassified from B to C and amid widespread confusion among young people over the health risks of the drug and the new legal situation. Health professionals agree that education is essential to prevent harm to a 'vulnerable minority' at risk of developing psychosis after smoking cannabis. Most expected the three-year funding for the advisers to be continued. But a survey by the National Health Education Group, a coalition of drug health professionals, found that 23 out of 46 LEAs would not have a school drug adviser in post by Easter. Only a third had secured funding for their advisers from other sources, as the Government hoped they would. In at least half of Britain's 150 LEAs redundancies were considered likely. Other research has revealed that some areas of Britain will be left without any school drug advisers at all. Eric Carlin, chairman of the Government-sponsored Drug Education Forum, said: 'The Government were being completely unrealistic in expecting LEAs to take on funding. The advisers are very important. It is vital that they are there.' Teachers told The Observer yesterday that they were dismayed by the sudden loss of the advisers. 'We need every bit of help we can get in schools and in drugs education. The Government are giving with one hand and taking with the other,' said one north London-based secondary school teacher. According to a Government survey published last year, nearly half of 15-year-olds have tried drugs and one in five is a regular user. The survey of 10,000 children in 321 English schools showed that 45 per cent of 15-year-olds said they had tried cannabis, sniffed glue or used harder drugs at some stage and nearly a third took cannabis over the previous year. The loss of the advisers will also affect other flagship programmes such as the 'healthy schools teams' and citizenship projects, according to the survey, and is likely to jeopardise the Department for Education and Skills' plan to roll out new guidance on drugs education to schools within weeks. 'With new Government guidelines coming into schools next month and current confusion among young people over cannabis the timing of this withdrawal of funding is very unfortunate,' said Harry Shapiro, of DrugScope, a national drugs charity. Shapiro said that the advisers provided a crucial link between the world of drugs professionals and education specialists. Such is the concern among Drug Action Teams, the bodies that co-ordinate the Government's anti-drugs policies at a local level, that the DFES was forced to issue a statement 'clarifying their position' through the Home Office late last year. Many professionals had been sure the funding for school drugs advisers would be continued. The statement, obtained by The Observer, explained that the three-year-old multi million pound programme would end in March and says that the DFES expects LEAs 'to plan how they will resource this work'. The Government has said that overall funding for schools will rise by four per cent per pupil this year. A DFES spokesman said: 'This survey is completely unrepresentative. LEAs are fully signed up to tackling drugs in schools and they - and schools - continue to have access to a wide range of resources for drugs education.' - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom