Pubdate: Thu, 15 Dec 2005 Source: Hillsboro Argus, The (OR) Copyright: 2005 The Hillsboro Argus Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/argus/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3523 Author: Ellen Ast Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) PETERSON DARE'S TO KEEP KIDS DRUG, ALCOHOL FREE In August Rick Peterson was wrapping up 24 years with the Tigard Police Department as a school resource officer at Tigard High School, capping a 31-year career in law enforcement. At the same time there was a new need for a qualified Drug Abuse and Resistance Education teacher in the Hillsboro School District. The two events meshed, and Peterson has spent this school year teaching DARE classes at North Plains and Indian Hills elementary schools. Because of budget shortfalls in the Washington County Sheriff's Department, his instruction is paid for with funds raised by the schools' parent-teacher groups. Peterson was enrolled in the state's second DARE officer training programs in 1989, several years after the federal government started the drug and alcohol prevention program to fight the War on Drugs. "It was the most intense training I've ever been through," Peterson remembered. "You are trained to be a facilitator; you are trained to be a disciplinarian." But Peterson and 35 others who completed the two-week, 160-hour DARE training knew no amount of training could exceed what is taught in the elementary school classroom. "You know what you are doing is giving kids the message about anti-drugs. You have to have that outlook, that you want to succeed." Peterson witnessed the effects of drugs when he started Tigard High School's student resource officer program a few years before becoming a certified DARE instructor. He says that's why he became a DARE educator -- to give students at a younger age the opportunity to make an informed decision about drugs. "Knowledge is the cure," he said. In Hillsboro, a resource officer from the Hillsboro Police Department teaches DARE to fifth graders in 15 schools located inside city limits. The district's other eight schools are located outside city limits in unincorporated Washington County. They used to get DARE education from the Washington County Sheriff's Office until money for county DARE programs was cut this year. Annie Kelsey, director of the district's school improvement team, said money from a large Safe Schools/Health Schools grant recently awarded to the district will help bring the DARE program back to those schools. The grant will also fund two more resource officers for the district. "In elementary school, 85 percent of kids said DARE is where they get their information on drugs and alcohol," Kelsey said. That information comes from a districtwide survey done last spring. Along with parents and friends, DARE was ranked by more than half of students at all grade levels who took the survey as one of their primary sources for drug and alcohol information. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin