Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jul 2005 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2005 The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) WRONG TO BEND RULES TO FUND ANTI-DRUG PROGRAM Legislature Skirted Bidding Process, Abused Taxpayers In 2001, the federal government stopped funding Rock In Prevention. The feds decided the anti-drug charity didn't meet standards for effective drug-prevention programs. That should have been a clue to Iowa lawmakers to question giving other public dollars to the organization. Apparently state legislators are clueless. They agreed to give the group $600,000, courtesy of the taxpayers. Iowans are paying for rock 'n' roll concerts for schoolchildren and for the group's compact discs. And there's no evidence the program reduces drug use by the children who bring the CDs home in their backpacks. Sound questionable? Well, there's more. Rock In Prevention bypassed the normal bidding process for publicly funded programs. Instead, lawmakers specifically appropriated money for a non-specific drug-prevention program that uses music - language crafted to funnel money to Rock In Prevention. When the Iowa Department of Public Health tried to allow other programs to compete for the money, lawmakers put a stop to it by writing a letter to the department. They also objected to the department's request for research on the program. Rock In Prevention held out its hand. Friends in the Statehouse opened the public's checkbook and delivered the bucks. No requirement for proof the program works. No other groups to compete with for the money. And no questions asked. Lawmakers should be ashamed of themselves. Taxpayers should be furious. Here are a few reasons why: Across Iowa, public schools don't have enough counselors to help kids through difficult times. These may be the same troubled kids who go on to use drugs. In some schools, students don't have enough exposure to arts, which might give them a creative outlet to cope with problems. In others, class sizes are too large, which gives kids less individual time with teachers. And too few high schools offer college-prep courses, to help kids get on track for a better future. Lawmakers underfund the basics of education with one hand and dole out money exclusively to an unproven program with the other. Rock In Prevention is well-intentioned and popular with kids. But good intentions shouldn't be enough to give a person or program access to public coffers. And no one should gain that access without going through the proper channels of bidding for that money. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth