Pubdate: Wed, 11 Feb 2004 Source: Winona Daily News (MN) Copyright: 2004 Winona Daily News Contact: http://www.winonadailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3177 Author: Kirsten Singleton WAPS DARE PROGRAM STILL 'ON LIFE SUPPORT' The DARE program will continue through the end of the school year, if not beyond. "What's going to happen in the future is still full of question marks," said Winona police officer Kevin Kearney, who teaches the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program to area fifth-graders. After the city of Winona cut DARE funding last year, Kearney led months of fund raising to keep the program alive. Kearney taught DARE to eight classes at Winona Middle School, St. Stanislaus and St. Matthew's. But when fund-raising efforts only yielded $30,000 - half of the program's cost n Winona Police Chief Frank Pomeroy pulled the plug on the program. That left, however, $30,000 in the DARE fund, and Kearney was asked to find a solution. Pomeroy suggested forming a committee to address the issue, Kearney said, so that Kearney wasn't charged with making the decision by himself. In early January, Kearney and his fellow committee members n County Commissioner David Stoltman, businessman Mark Zimmerman and Kwik Trip manager Judy Baker n came up with this proposal, which was presented to Eric Bartleson, superintendent of Winona Area Public Schools, and Winona Middle School Principal Scott Hannon: The Winona school district will be given all the funds raised for DARE, about $30,000, and will administer the funds, reimbursing the police department for providing a certified DARE instructor to teach the curriculum to fifth-grade students who did not participate in the program during the first semester of the school year. If WAPS later decides not to continue the DARE program and money remains in the fund, that money will be forwarded to another entity that legally uses the registered DARE name, such as Winona County DARE or Minnesota DARE. The agreement means that five classes of Winona Middle School fifth-graders, plus students at Ridgeway Community School, St. John's in Nodine and Bluffview Montessori School, will be able to participate in the program. "When I was at the Winona Middle School teaching half the fifth-graders, seeing the rest of the fifth-graders and knowing that they wouldn't have the program," it was tough, Kearney said. Kearney, who has moved on to second-shift patrol, will teach DARE during his off-duty hours, and his regular patrol duties will be a priority. He said teaching DARE this semester will cost about $12,000, leaving $18,000 left in the fund at the end of the year. This isn't a long-term solution, he said. But at least it's a start. "In a way it kind of buys us time - keeps us on life support," Kearney said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman