Pubdate: Wed, 30 Nov 2005 Source: Sudbury Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 The Sudbury Star Contact: http://www.thesudburystar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/608 Author: Rob O'Flanagan, The Sudbury Star 'I DON'T BELIEVE IN SCARE TACTICS' One Thousand Greater Sudbury Teens Get Graphic Lesson On Dangers Of Drugs And Driving Smart Youth Power Assembly * The Sudbury and District Health Unit sponsored the Smart Youth Power Assembly; * Public health nurse Nathalie Thistle said if kids take away the idea of making smart decisions when it comes to drugs and alcohol, and if better understand the risks involved in high risk behaviour, the presentation will have fulfilled its purpose; * Drug and alcohol use among northern youth, Thistle said, is higher than the provincial average. If verbal warnings about the dangers of doing drugs or booze and then getting behind the wheel of a car aren't sinking into thick, teenaged skulls, real images of charred bodies and blood-spattered wrecks just might. If a kid thinks doing crystal meth might be a fun thing to do, maybe they need to meet one of the addicts whose body literally rots from the drug, and who, when desperate enough, will pick and eat their own scabs to get a taste of the residual meth amphetamine that builds up in their wounds. Norbert Georget told more than 1,000 Greater Sudbury students Tuesday he didn't come to town to spoil their fun. But those who think having fun means driving while hammered or stoned, or experimenting with drugs that destroy your body and soul, should expect to have something unthinkable happen to them. Georget, a former advanced EMT Paramedic, saw so much senseless death on the job that he started The Smart Youth Power Assembly more than 20 years ago to warn kids about mixing driving and substances. He does his stark, emotionally wrenching presentations full-time now, travelling across the country with Power Point images that drop jaws and turn stomachs. They are the kinds of things paramedics and cops see every day in this country, he told students who gathered at Steelworkers Hall. "I don't believe in scare tactics," Georget told the youth. "This is real." With that, he showed real images of bodies burned beyond recognition in crashes involving drugs and alcohol. Students entered the hall with typical impudence and loudness, but the images silenced them. Georget said he would do anything to prevent young people from endangering their lives with drugs. He told of a presentation he made in a Manitoba school, where one student laughed at the horrendous images and made sarcastic comments about them throughout the presentation. Three weeks later, the student was dead, Georget said -- killed behind the wheel during a drug-and-alcohol binge. "Every five hours, on average, a mother and father is told their child is dead from a stupid drinking and driving accident," he said, flashing a dozen or so pictures of dead young people on the screen. Anyone who thinks marijuana is a harmless drug that doesn't impair your judgement needs to seriously rethink their value system, he said. About 18 per cent of fatal vehicle accidents are drug related and pot is the No. 1 drug on the list of culprits. Nick Pitt, 16, had the unenviable distinction of being called to the stage during Georget's infamous body bag demonstration. As a paramedic, he said, he went to the scene of an accident where a boy he knew from one of his presentations was dead in a ditch. He called Pitt to the stage and the young man helped him unfold and hold up a black body bag, the same one used to cover the dead boy's body. He urged the students not to make a choice that would land them in one of these bags and behind a chrome locker door in the local morgue. "It was definitely eye-opening," Pitt said. "I think it's changed the way I think. I'm more open to how fragile we are, and to how our choices could end our lives." Kelsey Cutinello, Samantha McLelland and Samantha Desjardins, all 16, entered the presentation thinking they would hear the same kinds of messages they've heard many times before. They were shaken by Georget's presentation. The girls said the behaviour Georget described -- kids doing drugs or binge drinking and then driving, or riding with drunk drivers -- happens all the time in Greater Sudbury. "You hear about that sort of thing happening in big cities like Toronto," said Cutinello. "But we have exactly the same things going on right here, all the time." Teens "think it's cool" to drink, and feel it's what they have to do to fit in," said McLelland. Georget tried to drive home the message that "it's OK not to drink ... it's OK not to do drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPF Florida)