Pubdate: Mon, 07 Mar 2005 Source: Daily News of Newburyport (MA) Copyright: 2005 Essex County Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.newburyportnews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/693 Author: Julia Diament Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) FORUM WILL EXAMINE DRUG ABUSE BY YOUTH NEWBURYPORT - In a county where 93 people have died of drug overdoses in the last two years alone, Newburyport is hardly immune to the growing horror of heroin addiction. On Thursday night, Mayor Mary Anne Clancy's Task Force on Underage Substance Abuse plans to issue parents with warnings of what to look for, and what to do if their child falls victim to opiates. The public forum, entitled, "Do you know what your children are doing tonight?" will be held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Newburyport High School Auditorium. "The message we are trying to send is that these drugs are everywhere, not just in low-income areas," Mayor Clancy said. "In a community as beautiful as Newburyport, it is sometimes easy to think that we don't have an onslaught of drug use, but this is simply not the case." A number of guest speakers will provide information about the increasing popularity of substance abuse among young people, and how members of the community can work together to help combat it. The forum will also emphasize what parents need to be aware of, such as signs to watch for if they suspect their child is experimenting with drugs, examples of what increasingly popular "designer drugs" might look like, and possible resources to turn to for assistance and support for substance abuse-related problems. One of the most frightening escalating drug-related problems on the North Shore is that of the rapidly growing abuse of opiates among young people, specifically, the abuse of OxyContin and heroin. In addition to the county's 93 confirmed overdose deaths, Steve O'Connell, spokesman for District Attorney Jonathan W. Blodgett, said there are another 77 believed, but not yet confirmed, to be the result of overdoses. There have been no reported opiate deaths in Newburyport in that two-year period. "If not for Narcan, (a drug used by emergency and medical providers to combat the effects of opiates) the figures would have been absolutely staggering," O'Connell said. Essex County Sheriff Frank Cousins said he has seen opiate abuse grow extensively over the past several years, due in large part to the increasingly easy accessibility young people have to such drugs. "It's often easier to find heroin than it is to buy beer," Cousins said, noting that heroin can generally be purchased on the street for as little as $4 to $6, often less than a six-pack of beer. It can take only one or two uses of heroin to become addicted. "The big thing is to educate parents, teachers, students and members of the community about how addictive heroin is, and what it can do to you," Cousins said of the forum. Paul Fleming, spokesman for the Essex County Sheriff's Department, has also seen firsthand what opiate addiction can do. "The prevalence of this (opiate abuse) in Essex County is much higher than in Suffolk County or Plymouth County," he said. "For 90 percent of the people who come to us, their reasons for breaking the law generally have to do with problems with drug and alcohol addiction." Cousins and Essex County District Attorney Jonathan W. Blodgett have been working to target opiate abuse in Massachusetts schools for some time, with an emphasis on treatment, prevention through education and enforcement, and are encouraging cities around the state to host forums. In addition to Blodgett and Cousins, other guest speakers at the forum include Newburyport Resource Officer Keith Carter, Lynn DARE Officer Larry Wentzel, Newburyport High School Principal Jim Lee, and Timothy Lawrence, a firefighter in Lynn who lost his 21-year-old daughter last year to a drug overdose. Sergeant Michael Reilly of the Northeast Merrimack Valley Drug Task Force will present a slideshow of visuals of different drugs to help parents identify some of the less obvious varieties of "designer drugs," such as ecstasy, that often resemble over-the-counter medications, such as Advil or Tylenol. Melinda Crossman, a member of the mayor's task force and the chair of the Parent Alliance at Newburyport High School, echoed the mayor's sentiments of misconceptions that these types of problems aren't happening around here. She said she became particularly concerned with the growing problem after The Daily News published a series of articles about the escalating use of heroin among local youths. "What struck me were the pictures; they looked just like my kids," Crossman said, of her decision to get involved with the task force. "Let's keep talking about it (drug abuse), so we can help our children make good decisions, because they are ultimately going to make their own." Sheriff Cousins agrees that parental control only goes so far. "What is scary is when I see parents who have done a great job raising their children; children from good, loving families who come to jail for committing drug and alcohol-related crimes," he said. "That's when I say we have a serious problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth