Pubdate: Mon, 04 Oct 2004 Source: Durango Herald, The (CO) Copyright: 2004 The Durango Herald Contact: http://durangoherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/866 Author: Shane Benjamin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Law enforcement educates children on responsibility One year ago, sheriff's deputy Julie Harris walked into Wal-Mart to order a specially made cake for Sunnyside Elementary School students who were graduating from TRACK - a law enforcement outreach program. Harris asked the cake decorator to put a TRACK logo on top, and the employee assured her it would be no problem. Harris had no reason to be concerned; after all, the store had prepared a similar cake for her before. But when Harris picked up the cake, instead of a TRACK logo, it had a picture of a running track. Instances like that have motivated Harris to do a better job educating the public about TRACK - which stands for Teaching Responsibility and Choices to Kids. The TRACK program, started by the Durango Police Department and La Plata County Sheriff's Office, replaced the DARE program about two years ago in La Plata County schools. DARE - which stands for Drug Abuse Resistance Education - is a good program, Harris said, but TRACK is better suited for elementary school students in La Plata County. DARE focuses mainly on drugs, which are a big deal in La Plata County, Harris said, but not as big a deal as bullying. In order for law-enforcement agencies to receive DARE funding, they are required to follow a 16-week curriculum almost verbatim. TRACK, funded mostly by local donations and a few grants, is an eight-week program that teaches elementary students about making the right choices in life and that making the wrong choices has consequences, Harris said. Lessons include: "Introducing the concept of rights and responsibilities," which teaches that all human beings have rights and that responsibilities go with those rights. "Gateway drugs," which provides students with basic alcohol and drug fact information that help them understand the consequences of using drugs. "Pressures," which helps students understand how they can be influenced by mass media (television, radio and the Internet), and help them develop skills to recognize the positive and negative influences they can have on how they think and act. "Violence - bullying," which helps students recognize that bullying and other destructive acts of violence are inappropriate ways of dealing with anger and resolving disagreements. Children also get to check out a Sheriff's Office car with flashy graphics and writing. "The car is always the real neat eye-catcher for the kids," Harris said. There are two school resource officers covering seven schools - Harris is one and Durango police officer Jeremiah Lee is the other. Harris said she spends all day at a school and does four to eight classes a day. She helps children arriving at school find their classes safely and helps them leave safely at the end of the day. TRACK is "proactive policing," said sheriff's Sgt. Doug Hanna, who supervises the program and is a TRACK board member. It works to prevent incidents from happening, rather than responding to events after they happen. "We're pretty excited about the program, because we truly feel that it is making a difference," Hanna said. "Part of being successful is making a difference in society - making a positive one rather than a negative one - and I think the TRACK program is accomplishing that." The TRACK program also issues identification cards to youngsters. The cards can be carried by children and have the children's pictures on them. The program has issued about 1,000 cards, Harris said. "Those seem to be really popular with the parents," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek