Pubdate: Thu, 15 Apr 2004 Source: Plain Dealer, The (OH) Copyright: 2004 The Plain Dealer Contact: http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/342 Author: Rachel Dissell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) DARE HANGING ON AS IT TESTS PROGRAMS TO RETAIN RELEVANCY It used to be that a frying egg was enough to persuade kids to keep their brains off drugs. Or so parents and teachers and drug prevention gurus thought. They also believed that DARE, a program created by police in the gang- and drug-ridden sections of Los Angeles, would steer - or scare - kids away from the same temptations. The beloved program, which has police officers preaching the dangers of drugs, is well-funded and defended, even years after multiple researchers and the surgeon general's office said it didn't do enough to keep kids clean. In Ohio, more than $3 million is still spent on the program each year by the attorney general's office. The money comes from a fee that drivers are charged to reinstate suspended licenses and is distributed as grants to 222 law enforcement agencies. Attorney General Jim Petro has fought to maintain the flow of money, according to his spokeswoman, Kim Norris. In 2003, he testified in a Senate hearing asking for lawmakers to restore the program after it was removed in the budget process. Petro knows the program needs to be modified to include additional exposure for middle school students, Norris said. The U.S Department of Education severed ties with the program in 2000, saying it wasn't scientifically proven to work. Schools can no longer use money from federal Safe and Drug Free Schools grants to pay for DARE. The Ohio Department of Education discontinued funding last year. But schools can still offer DARE if they choose to and if they pay for it, said department spokesman J.C. Benton. Meanwhile, new techniques - based on science and research - are being piloted for today's savvy students that are way ahead of frying eggs and long lectures about what marijuana use does to brain cells. Future drug prevention techniques include having students examine medical scans of brains on drugs to see the effects. And as part of the "New DARE" developed at the University of Akron for seventh- and ninth-graders, police officers act more as coaches for kids, instead of lecturers. The program, which is being tested on 19,000 students in six U.S cities, is two years into a five-year study and showed positive results at the end of 2003, according to Nancy Dudley, a Washington, D.C.-based spokeswoman for New DARE. None of the cities is in Ohio, said Dudley. But some of the concepts may be trickling into existing programs. Geauga County has stood by the program, and DARE officer Joe Keough, from the county's sheriff office, said this year his curriculum has changed. "We no longer lecture, we facilitate," he said. "We give students the facts and let them come to the conclusions on their own." He said there will be more emphasis on following up with middle school students to reinforce what is taught in elementary school. "Nothing's perfect," Keough said. "You have to evaluate and make adjustments. If I thought there was a better program out there, I'd use it." In seven Northeast Ohio counties, more than $1 million in DARE money was given to 61 police departments and sheriff's offices for the 2003-2004 school year. In the rest of the country, Dudley said, DARE has taken a hit, although she said it is still the "grandfather of drug prevention programs" for kids. Dudley dismisses some of DARE' s criticisms. "DARE never made any claim that kids wouldn't ever do drugs," she said. "Prevention is like a vaccine. It doesn't work forever. You still need booster shots." She also said that 20 years ago when DARE spread rapidly around the nation, drug prevention wasn't even considered a scientific endeavor. Dudley said Ohio's expenditures on the imperfect program are preventing the death of DARE while the new programs are being created and tested. If the state cut the money, it might be impossible to ever get it again. "It's like throwing out the whole car because part of the engine is broken." Toledo police dropped DARE in 2002, citing research that showed the program didn't prevent drug use as students got older. So did Cincinnati. But many cities in Ohio that have scaled back or dropped the program did so for budgetary reasons. The grants from the state only pay for half the DARE officer's salary. Cleveland slashed its program as part of recent budget cuts. Avon Lake dropped the program in 2000 after a longtime instructor retired. The Lake County sheriff's of fice started its own program financed with a countywide levy. About $117,000 has been spent in each of the last three years. Retired officers and teachers run the program, which includes more broad-based decision-making skills. Macedonia, which has had the program for 14 years, lost it's fulltime DARE and school resource officer when he took a promotion to sergeant and the city didn't have money to replace him. That officer had been shared with schools in several neighboring towns, Chief Jon Golden said. "Money is tight and everybody is just tightening the belt to notches that don't exist," Golden said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh