Pubdate: May 24, 2004 Source: Hernando Today (FL) Contact: http://www.hernandotoday.com/lettertotheeditor.htm Website: http://www.hernandotoday.com Address: 15299 Cortez Blvd., Brooksville, FL 34613 Fax: (352) 544-5249 Copyright: 2004, Media General Inc. All rights reserved Author: Cliff Hightower Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) GETTING THE MESSAGE ACROSS Deputy Clayton Miller doesn't drive the truck. He drives The Car. "It's just another tool to get the point across," says Miller, the Hernando County Sheriff's Office full-time Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) officer. The tools he uses can be seen out of the classroom - like the souped up Mitsubishi DARE car - or in the classroom. The point is to somehow, someway get across to kids that it does not pay to do drugs. "The majority of kids have heard that drugs are bad for you," Miller says. "If that's all you have to say then you're not going to get the message across. They know they're going to be bad for you." Four years ago, the sheriff's office had one program - Junior Deputies - -- that dealt specifically with school age children and acted to help educate children on the effects of using drugs. Now besides Junior Deputies, the sheriff's office also uses programs such as ROAR (Respect Others and Yourself), a youth summer camp, state resource officers who can help as counselors and DARE. One of the reasons for this, according to Sheriff Richard Nugent, stems back to a study first conducted by the Department of Children and Families that found the level of substance abuse in Hernando County by children was greater than the state average. "That was really alarming to me," Nugent said. "Especially since I had school kids around that same age." But Nugent says the push has not been just trying to arrest offenders. The push is towards educating school children, so they will stop and think about what they are doing and how they can harm themselves and others around them. With education, the hope is that it will help prevent drug use in the future. And the new programs the sheriff's office now offers are a way to get that message across, from the fifth grade to the eighth. "You have to repeatedly get the message out," Nugent said. One on one Hernando County Deputy Bill Pope, school resource officer (SRO) for Hernando High School, has a chance to get the message out everyday. As an SRO, Pope interacts with more than 1,000 kids at the high school on a daily basis. He is as much a teacher and a confidant as he is a law enforcement officer. Within his office there are constant signs that the war against drugs continues every day. Four giant posters hang on a wall behind his desk that tells the harm that drugs can ultimately cause. Each poster carries a picture of a teenager. Above each poster are the words: Ecstasy, marijuana, cocaine and alcohol. Several different points come off each picture showing what the effects of drugs or alcohol can have upon the brain, kidneys, heart or other organs. "The pictures themselves tell a story," Pope says, turning in his chair to look at the posters. "The first thing kids say when they look at is, 'I didn't know that.'" Pope sees his role as not only educating children about the good things, but also the bad things. In high schools, the SROs at this time are the only reach law enforcement has within the county into the high schools. DARE and Junior Deputies programs are for third, fourth, fifth, sixth graders at this time. There are also plans to ultimately have the programs in seventh, eighth grades, as well, Nugent said, but it will take time and money in order for this to be completed. The idea, he said, is to stress repeated education to kids throughout the years they are in public education. It is repeating the message. "It's a long-term project, but we hope to see reduction in high school," Nugent said. Pope says if he needs assistance at the high school from the DARE officer, he can receive it. In October at Hernando High School, the sheriff's office recently implemented a youth crime watch that is being created at all the high schools in the county because of a state mandate. Pope says the crime watch is a tremendous success, especially with battling drugs. "They enjoy it," Pope said. "It's great. It gives the kids something. They can participate and say this isn't going to happen in my school." With the crime watch, Pope hands out small walkie-talkies to several different students and they are then posted in areas across the campus. They monitor the area and report back in to Pope on what is going on across the school. Usually one student works undercover, as well. But the students are not allowed to take part in any type of action. "They're just eyes and ears," Pope said. Is there a problem? All agree there is a problem with drugs and alcohol in schools, and officials say they are addressing the problem. But just law enforcement alone won't solve it. It will take schools, families, churches and leaders in the community working together, Nugent said. "It has to be the community..." Nugent said. "It has to be the school district... It has to be us." For the last several years, community leaders and the sheriff's office have banded together to form the Hernando County Anti-Drug Coalition in order to address the drug problem. The biggest factor, according to Pope, is not to pretend there is not a problem. "Sometimes people don't want to accept there is a problem," he said. "But you can't turn your head away from it." Some of this is to keep telling kids that drugs are bad and it does not pay to get involved with them. Just arresting kids and putting them in jail is not going to work, he said. "It's just not punish, punish, punish, without training," Pope said. But law enforcement officer think that over time the relationships they are creating will have lasting effects of the kids. Hopefully, Pope says they will be able to establish leaders in the community. The biggest problem he sees, he said, is peer pressure forcing kids into situations they might not normally take part in. But with programs instituted by the sheriff's office in the schools across the county, perhaps it will help sway kids from taking even that first step towards drugs. "Don't be the puppet," Pope says. "Be the puppet master." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek