Pubdate: Tue, 27 Apr 2004 Source: North County Times (CA) Copyright: 2004 North County Times Contact: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: Jo Moreland Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) DARE PROGRAM GONE IN ALL BUT 2 NORTH COUNTY CITIES NORTH COUNTY ---- A national drug abuse education program is disappearing at many North County schools. Budget cutting is generally to blame, and the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program, better known as DARE, didn't meet new state and federal funding requirements, school officials and law enforcement officers said Tuesday. Until last September, the San Diego County Sheriff's Department had 10 DARE locations countywide, including Fallbrook and Valley Center. Now the sheriff's DARE program is available only in Encinitas and Poway, because those cities are still willing to pay for it, sheriff's Sgt. Julie Sutton said. "There's no funding for it," said Sutton, who supervises the sheriff's program. "All of the other sheriff's DARE deputies were redeployed." Started in 1983 in Los Angeles, police and sheriff's deputies teach the DARE program in school classrooms in an effort to curb drug abuse. School districts, law enforcement agencies or cities pay for the cost of the officers' salaries and program materials through a variety of sources. The DARE curriculum recently expanded to help students deal with such things as bullying, stress and gangs, but it may be too little, too late. Some schools have had to go to other programs in order to finance that education. "We still have a DARE program," said Ana Lopez-Rosende of the Escondido Union Elementary School District. "We're finishing it this year." DARE isn't on a state-approved funding list of programs that are scientifically researched for drug and alcohol prevention, said the school district's coordinator of pupil services and Safe and Drug Free Schools program. The Escondido Union school district used DARE and two other programs to cover alcohol, tobacco, drugs and violence education for students. DARE was taught only to fifth-graders. After a year's pilot study of two programs, Lopez-Rosende said, the "Positive Action" program will be recommended to the school board instead of DARE. Positive Action will cover the needs for all students in all grades, she said. It will cost $310,000 this year to start the new program, said Lopez-Rosende. After that, the cost is estimated at $30,000 to $50,000 a year for Positive Action program materials. Under the DARE program, the school district paid $2,000 to $4,000 a year for fifth-grade materials and the officer was supplied through the Escondido Police Department. DARE is a good way for children to get to know officers and to learn about law enforcement, but school resource officers will continue to be at campuses, said Escondido detective Lt. David Mankin. Similar funding requirements led to DARE being dropped in Oceanside and Carlsbad schools, officials said. The Carlsbad Police Department still has one part-time DARE officer for four Encinitas Union School District elementary schools that are in Carlsbad. The district pays for the officer's time on campus, but the slot may be dropped by the Police Department. "We have to make some cutbacks," and the preliminary decision is that DARE has to go because of the department's budget situation, said Carlsbad Sgt. Don DeTar, a former DARE instructor. "If it's a difference between patrol officers on the streets or officers in school, it's a tough cut." Encinitas city and school officials looked at the program in deciding budgets this year, said Encinitas sheriff's Lt. Don Fowler, "and they said 'No, we can't let that go.'" The officials decided the program had value because it teaches about life as well as drugs, Fowler said. Deputy Kathy Wayne teaches DARE to kindergarten-through sixth-grade students at eight schools in the Encinitas and Cardiff school districts. "It gives kids the tools they need and the knowledge to deal with difficult situations," said Wayne. "There's a process to getting to the right choice." Poway's DARE program for fifth-graders was funded in 2003 for two years, because the City Council sees it as a popular program with support from parents and students, said Poway City Manager Jim Bowersox. "Certainly in 2005, theoretically the entire budget is up for grabs," Bowersox said. "You're always looking at your optional programs." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom