Pubdate: Thu, 11 Mar 2004 Source: Daily Targum (NJ Edu) Copyright: 2004 Daily Targum Contact: http://www.dailytargum.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/715 Author: Alice Lee GRANT FUNDS SUBSTANCE PREVENTION Earlier this month, the Middlesex County Department of Human Services settled on a $703,504 allocation to fund drug and alcohol prevention programs throughout the county. The total amount and the money split between each community were respectively determined by a formula based upon the total population of Middlesex County as a whole and the distinct population of each town in the county. A variety of programs are being created for children as young as preschoolers to senior citizens. These programs focus on the prevention of substance abuse specifically - as opposed to the treatment of it. In the city, the target is elementary school children and some teenagers. One main program New Brunswick Alliance coordinator Dave Blevins has set up is a social decisions program, in which children are taught "skills in how to resist the lure of alcohol, drugs and tobacco." Another program is mainly to teach children ages nine-12 about the effects of tobacco. A third unique program is Teens Helping Teens, in which teenagers are shown "how to operate video equipment and given the means so that they may create their own alcohol, drug and tobacco prevention videos," Blevins said. The governor's Council on Alcohol and Drug Dependency and the state's Drug Enforcement and Demand Reduction Fund provided the funds for the programs. This funding is then given to municipal alliance groups in each community - citizens' organizations consisting of professionals and volunteers concentrated on preventing the use of alcohol, tobacco and other drugs. The short-term results of these programs are very difficult to gauge. The prevention of substance abuse is generally a long-term strategy. Doug Breen, coordinator of the Middlesex County Alliance, said drug and alcohol problems evolved over a long period of time and will take a long time to fix. "[Similar] to the prevention of coronary heart diseases, ... it may take a generation [for these prevention programs] to start making a difference," Breen said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager