Pubdate: Sat, 30 Oct 2004 Source: Federal Way Mirror (WA) Contact: http://www.fedwaymirror.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2077 Author: Mike Halliday Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) $425,000 ADDED TO DRUG FIGHT Four elementary schools in Federal Way will have $425,000 to help with drug prevention and abuse. The grant from the federal Office of National Drug Control Policy was awarded to Enterprise, Rainier View, Panther Lake and Sherwood Forest elementary schools over five years. Using the federal bucks, the schools plan to create the Wonderwood Village project. The goals of the project are to reduce the number of students that leave the elementary schools already using drugs and alcohol, and to reinforce measures to give students who aren't using more information and help so they don't start, said David Moore, co-president of the Enterprise PTA. It's a two-pronged approach to a problem in a part of Federal Way where 5.1 percent of eighth-grade students binge on alcohol on a weekly basis, which is .03 percent higher than the state average, according to Moore. Results from the Healthy Youth Survey showed that in the 12 months prior to the survey, the use of alcohol at school was 2 percent versus the state average of 7.8 percent. There are more than 2,700 students in the geographic area the program will serve. Moore, a professor at the University of Washington, is associate director of the institution's Center for the Study and Teaching of At-Risk Students (C-STAR) that connects K-12 schools and early childhood education programs with universities, community groups and businesses to work on improving anti-drug programs. He wrote the grant along with his wife, Nicole, also co-president of the Enterprise PTA. Enterprise's counselor, Stacy Traylor, said the grant will give the schools and community the time to organize programs that are normally done when there is spare time with few resources. There are a lot of programs working on prevention at the primary grade levels, but few work on helping those students using drugs and alcohol to stop, he said. The Enterprise PTA looked at its activities and determined it needed to make some changes, Moore said. There weren't any teachers in the organization because it wasn't as supportive as it could have been. After more than a year of change that included some internal turmoil, Moore said the PTA agreed to work on the health of students and specifically in regards to drugs and alcohol. When the parent group approached principal Margot Hightower with their plan to help, she supported their goal and offered them the use of an empty portable building, where Wonderwood Village will be headquartered. The grant took more than a year to put together. While the dollars will be held by the PTA, a UW official will have oversight over how the money is used. The near future will be spent considering programs in place within the community and schools. That includes a group studying how to bolster and bring together prevention programs, while a second group looks at ways to have intervention programs from the community work in the school. A third group plans to bring prevention programs to kids up to 7 in the community. Then a plan will be created to bring those programs together to help students and include assistance from UW specialists on how to best use the resources at hand. The model is not untried, Hightower said. Similar projects have been started in Juneau, Alaska and in Selah in eastern Washington by the C-STAR program. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek