Pubdate: Tue, 04 May 2004 Source: Daily Home, The (Talladega, AL) Copyright: 2004 Consolidated Publishing Contact: http://www.dailyhome.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1632 Author: Kellie Long Note: also listed as contact Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) OFFICIALS SAY D.A.R.E WORKS IN ST. CLAIR COUNTY ST. CLAIR COUNTY - Until recently, D.A.R.E. officers only worried about the battle against drug use among young people. Now they are faced with funding cuts and negative publicity. With all the bad press about D.A.R.E. and its alleged ineffectiveness, officers are hoping officials will pay more attention to positive results in their own communities. Several noted and published studies claim to have proven that the long- and short-term effect of the D.A.R.E. program is little to none. According to a study published in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology titled "Project D.A.R.E.: No Effects at 10-year Follow-up," "the widespread popularity of D.A.R.E. is especially noteworthy, given the lack of evidence for its efficacy. Although few long-term studies have been conducted, the preponderance of evidence suggests that D.A.R.E. has no long-term effect on drug use." Despite the reports of these negative findings cities across the nation are still finding it in their budgets to fund the program. St. Clair County is no different. Does D.A.R.E. work? St. Clair County D.A.R.E. officer Deputy Donnie Howell has been teaching the D.A.R.E. program since its beginning in St. Clair County nearly 13 years ago. In his tenure he has seen the program grow and change as the issues facing young people have changed. "There are supposedly studies that show the program does not work," Howell said. "But there are just as many that show it does work." Howell, who conducted a survey of his own about the effectiveness of the program, said the percentages show the program works for St. Clair County students. Howell surveyed his fifth-grade students about their attitudes toward illegal drug use and found that 90 percent overall already had a negative attitude about using drugs. "That's a pretty good number to start with," he said. "It shows that most of these kids already have a preconceived notion that drugs are bad." Howell surveyed these same students in the seventh grade and said there may have been only a 1 percent increase in that number, but the scores of young people who are considered "at-risk" changed their scores dramatically. "After surveying these kids again in the seventh grade, at-risk students raised their numbers by around 14 percent," Howell said. "Fourteen percent more of these kids now have a more negative attitude about illegal drug use." Howell said that contrary to popular belief, the D.A.R.E. curriculum is not just about saying no to drugs. The program focuses on teaching students how to handle peer pressure and conflicts, and it also addresses safety issues. D.A.R.E. is taught during the fifth grade in all county schools "The curriculum is designed to give good decision-making skills. What makes it unique is that it is taught by police officers," Howell said. "It is a great part of any department's community policing effort and it fosters a much better relationship between kids, parents and law enforcement." Pell City Police Chief, and former D.A.R.E. officer, Greg Turley agreed with Howell, saying that only a small part of the course actually focuses on drug use. "Saying no is only one 45-minute class out of a long program," Turley said. "In kindergarten through fourth grade we also discuss safety issues and grades five through six get the full curriculum." Turley said the Pell City Police Department continues its D.A.R.E. instruction into the seventh and ninth grades where students have questions about the law and their rights. "In the high school program students are taught the law and how it affects them," Howell said. 'They find out that they can get into trouble doing some of the things they thought were harmless. It tends to dispel a lot of erroneous information they have received in the past." Funding "After Sept. 11, a lot of the D.A.R.E. and social programs' funding was diverted to Homeland Security," Howell said. "The grants for D.A.R.E. are not there anymore and small departments are having to cut the program." The St. Clair County program in five schools is funded through the Sheriff's Department budget, the County Commission and private donations. The Pell City program still receives a small grant each year, but funding is also a line-item in the Police Department's annual budget. Funding is also provided through the Pell City D.A.R.E. Board Inc., of which Assistant District Attorney Richard Minor is chairman. "Other agencies are hoping to get the funding that is cut from D.A.R.E.," Howell said. "D.A.R.E. is not meant to replace any other social programs or school counseling. Its purpose is to work with other programs for what is best for our young people." Getting results "D.A.R.E. is not meant to replace any program nor is it a silver bullet," Turley said. "But anything you give these kids to put in their tool belts to use in life will help them. How do you measure how many kids didn't break into cars or didn't get pregnant because of the program? You can't." Howell and Turley stress that the lessons learned in the D.A.R.E. program serve young people throughout their lives, not just through school. "I run into some of my D.A.R.E. students from time to time," Turley said. "They still know my name and tell me they still have their workbooks." Howell has even more impressive evidence that the D.A.R.E. program works to teach more than how to say no to drugs. He has a letter that shows the program teaches self-respect and courage above all else. The letter, sent to Sheriff Terry Surles, is from a sixth-grade girl who says she learned from Howell and the D.A.R.E. program to tell her trusted person if something bad happens to her. She said that because of D.A.R.E. she had the courage to tell her parents about a man doing "bad things" to her. "The man is now facing several indictments because other older girls are coming forward, too," Howell said. "If this doesn't show that the program works nothing does." About Kellie L. Long Kellie Long is Editor of The St. Clair Times. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin