Pubdate: Wed, 02 Feb 2005 Source: Daily Reflector (Greenville, NC) Copyright: 2005 Daily Reflector Contact: http://www.reflector.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1456 Author: Paul Dunn Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) WILLIS SEEKS COMMUNITY SUPPORT IN COMBATING YOUTH DRUG ABUSE If Renee Willis were any more altruistic, hope wouldn't spring eternal, it would pole vault. Exhorted from an early age to respect the teachings of the Episcopal Church, the newly hired executive director of the Pitt County Coalition on Substance Abuse is a walking, talking golden ruler. "I was raised with the belief system that we are here to do what we can do to make the world a kinder, gentler and better world for all its inhabitants," said Willis, a 21-year Greenville resident born in Portland, Maine, and raised in Winchester, Va. Hired Jan. 1 to lead the 2-year-old council, Willis brings to her half-time, $32,500-a-year job experience as a therapeutic educator with Pitt County Schools and as an HIV counselor and tester for Pitt County Mental Health, among other positions. The learning curve in her new job has been steep, she admits. The coalition was formed to help reduce tobacco, alcohol and other drug use among young people in Pitt County. "I was hired as half time, but right now, it is very full time," the 46-year-old said with a laugh. Willis, who has a master's degree in health education from East Carolina University, sees a drug-free community as the coalition's ultimate goal. Along the way in this five-to-10-year scenario, she hopes to garner continuing support from such diverse groups as local governments, law enforcement, hospitals, schools, churches, parents and anyone else who wants to help. "Ultimately, we're talking about providing a culture and environment where there are other options besides taking drugs where young people can be successful," Willis said. "We need to think outside the box and offer alternatives for success." According to a Youth Risk Behavior Study administered to 2,014 Pitt County middle school students in March 2003, sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders favor alcohol over all other drugs. Next comes marijuana, then inhalants, cocaine, chewing tobacco and steroid pills or shots. Cigarette use is holding steady since past surveys. Willis views what she calls middle school "huffing" - sniffing glue, gasoline or cleaners - as one of the country's greatest drug concerns, though the habit hasn't increased in Pitt County. "It's very scary," Willis said. "The quick highs do a lot of damage to the brain cells. You open up underneath your sink, and there are all these huffable cleaning products." As executive director, Willis hopes to bring together a variety of resources to combat adolescent drug abuse in Pitt County. She also hopes to help raise funds to augment the coalition's $100,000-a-year federal grant, renewable for the next five years. She has the right stuff to do it all, coalition pillar Dr. David Ames said. "She knows the county and has a good sense of all the players," Ames, Pitt County Mental Health medical director, said. "She is very intelligent and sympathetic and will be good at getting groups to work together." Willis, who has been married to Stephen Willis for 29 years and has two daughters, unwinds from the stress and constant go of her job by, as she calls it, "plowing away" on the golf course. "I turn off the cell phone and get out, and it is a world of peace," she said. Not unlike the world her mother raised her to believe in. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth