Pubdate: Sun, 28 Aug 2005 Source: Standard-Examiner (UT) Copyright: 2005 Ogden Publishing Corporation Contact: http://www.standard.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/421 Author: Tim Gurrister Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) ANNUAL PICNIC FEATURES 200 DRUG COURT FANS OGDEN -- Some 75 recovering alcoholics and substance abusers took over the bowery at Lorin Farr Park Saturday evening for the 4th annual Ogden Drug Court Alumni Picnic. About 200 family members and friends joined the gathering with the alumni group, one of the stronger components of the 2nd District Court alternative program for drug abusers. When the first alumni group of drug court graduates gathered about 41/2 years ago to form the alumni committee, their number was about five. Typically it takes a year to get through the intensive therapies and testing of drug court to reach alumni status. "We sort of sat around twiddling our thumbs, wondering exactly what we should be doing with the alumni," said Kevin Koopmans, the Weber County Human Services substance abuse counselor who started the drug court program. "We never imagined this," he said Saturday, gesturing toward the bowery full of alumni and family, children bustling around everywhere. "We were hoping for this," said K.C. Benn, drug court treatment coordinator, "but it's still a surprise." Koopmans just returned from a national drug court conference in Florida in June where speakers talked about a 5 percent benchmark as normal for drug court graduates to get involved with alumni programs. The Ogden figure is more like 25 percent, Koopmans said, with about 50 graduates attending alumni committee meetings. "And they meet weekly," he said. "At the convention they were happy if they were showing for monthly meetings. In its 51/2 years of existence, the Ogden drug court has produced about 200 graduates, officials said, with a similar but smaller number washing out of the program in that same time period. For Lynne Pietrucha, drug court is structure and accountability. With 717 days "clean" and as one of the newer members of the alumni group, she said before drug court, "Everything was somebody else's fault. I had to learn to be accountable for myself." As to her former drug of choice, she said, "All of them. I would take anything. But I got arrested for methamphetamine and marijuana." And of the alumni group, and a drug court graduate's continuing attendance in support groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and others, she said, "We're a family ... The biggest thing is being part of something. When I can help another addict, it really helps me out." Koopmans also points to the veterans of the alumni group: Mike Memmott, the only president its ever had and its leader in days clean, 1,595; and Seana M., who doesn't give out her last name, Alcoholics Anonymous-style, like many drug court grads. She's second in days clean with 1,494. The alumni committee's latest list trumpets 102 members with a total of 60,486 clean days, or 165.6 years. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman