Pubdate: Thu, 22 Apr 2004 Source: Otago Daily Times (New Zealand) Copyright: 2004 Allied Press Limited Contact: http://www.stuff.co.nz/otago Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/925 Author: Jane Smith DARE STRUGGLING FOR SUPPORTERS People horrified at the attack by a child on an 80-year-old woman in South Dunedin should act on that emotion and get involved in programmes that help children make good decisions in their life, Dare Otago chairman Senior Constable Paul Howard says. South Dunedin woman Elizabeth Ferguson was sworn at and pushed against a shop wall allegedly by an 8-year old boy on Tuesday. Not enough ordinary people were supporting proactive organisations that helped children make good choices in their life, either by volunteering, serving on committees, or donating money or in kind, Mr Howard said. Dare, which stands for Drug Abuse Resistance Education, provides programmes that aim to help children think about their life choices, take personal responsibility for their actions, deal with peer pressure and resist using drugs. But despite research that showed the programmes were among the most effective in the world in changing young people's attitude and behaviour, and a national reputation for efficiency, Dare Otago was struggling with a lack of supporters and finances. Following the Dare Otago annual meeting yesterday, Mr Howard bemoaned the lack of supporters and the strain on everyone still involved to keep delivering programmes to the same number of children with dwindling funds. "It's the same people doing all the jobs all the time." Mr Howard said. Dare was intended to be a community organisation run in partnership with the police, but because not enough members of the public were involved in Otago, it was being run more and more by already-busy police officers, he said. "Overall, we need people to get involved and taking ownership of what's happening in their community and getting involved in organisations that actually work." Since 2000 when major sponsors Telecom and The Lottery Grants Board changed their criteria, it had been harder to raise the money needed for Dare programmes. The cost of providing Dare programmes was about $16 a child, most of which were run in schools in conjunction with classroom teachers. North Otago and Oamaru Dare support committee member Margaret Thompson (72) encouraged more grandparents to get involved in Dare. Grandparents had valuable skills to pass on to children and it was important to know the temptations their grandchildren faced today. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake