Pubdate: Mon, 27 Dec 2004 Source: Chillicothe Gazette (OH) Copyright: 2004 Chillicothe Gazette Contact: http://www.chillicothegazette.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.chillicothegazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2749 AREA ANTI-DRUG MEDIA CAMPAIGN WORKING Two recent surveys -- one national and one local -- show drug use is again declining among teenagers. The Monitoring the Future Survey found there has been a 17 percent decline in drug use nationally by 8th, 10th and 12th grade students from 2001 to 2004. This finding translates into 600,000 fewer teens using drugs now than in 2001. Our own local survey done by the Coalition for a Drug-Free Greater Cincinnati has shown similar results between 2000 and 2004. During this four-year period, beer use is down 37 percent, cigarette use decreased 32 percent and marijuana use decreased 19 percent. In fact, in part due to the work of the coalition, use of marijuana, beer and cigarettes by young people in our area is below state and national averages. This is very encouraging news for Southern Ohio parents, teenagers, teachers, and everyone who cares about the welfare of our kids. Fewer teens are using drugs here and across the country because of the deliberate and serious messages they have received about the dangers of drugs from their parents and through prevention efforts such as the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. Having fewer youths use drugs is important because we know that if young people can abstain from drugs before they graduate from high school, they are much less likely to use and have problems with them later. The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign is an innovative public-private partnership that pushes back against the popular culture that glamorizes or promotes drug, alcohol and tobacco use among teens. I helped initiate the program years ago, and have been its champion in Congress because I believe it can change attitudes, which then changes behavior. I was pleased that in 2002 the Media Campaign was reworked to produce even harder-hitting ads that have focused on the harm of marijuana. The Media Campaign has been a powerful tool in this effort to educate Americans, particularly teens, on the serious threat marijuana poses. And the results have been excellent. The Greater Cincinnati Coalition, which I founded eight years ago, is a comprehensive, long-term effort to mobilize every sector of the 10-county area around Cincinnati to take an active role in preventing substance abuse. It brings local community organizations together with business leaders, parents, teens, clergy, law enforcement and school officials to implement anti-drug initiatives, and has become a model for dozens of communities nationwide. I believe it is crucial communities around the country are organized to respond to their local drug problems in a comprehensive and coordinated manner. The Drug Free Communities Program recognizes federal anti-drug resources must be invested at the community level with those who have the most power to reduce the demand for drugs -- parents, teachers, business leaders, the media, religious leaders, law enforcement officials, youth and others. To get involved in the Coalition or learn more about its work, call (513) 751-8000, or check out its website at www.drugfreecincinnati.org. As part of its efforts, the Coalition helps run an extensive local media campaign through television, radio and print that adds to the national campaign. In fact, the local TV stations, radio stations, and newspapers in southwest Ohio have generously donated more than $1 million in anti-drug ads on an annual basis for the last three years. We believe this is the most aggressive anti-drug media campaign in the country, and it is working to help keep kids off drugs. Based on our survey, young people who have seen anti-drug ads on a regular basis are 20 percent less likely to use drugs. They are also 16 percent less likely to use tobacco and 19 percent less likely to use alcohol. These results locally, and now nationally, indicate prevention and education tools such as the media campaign work to create safer neighborhoods and a better future for our young people. * Write Rep. Rob Portman at 8044 Montgomery Road, Room 540, Cincinnati, Ohio, 45236, call (800) 784-6366 or e-mail him at - --- MAP posted-by: Josh