Pubdate: Fri, 11 Mar 2005 Source: Charlotte Sun Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 Sun Coast Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.sun-herald.com/newsch.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1708 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) SOME GOOD KIDS DESERVE THEIR DAY IN SPOTLIGHT Let's Talk About Good Kids Recently, we wrote about the alarming rate of drug use among Charlotte County teens. Today, we want to tell you about one teen who not only doesn't do drugs, but has the courage to alert school officials about someone who would sell drugs to his friends. And, we'll tell you about two other teens who pulled a victim from a crashed vehicle that went into a water-filled canal. Good kids, doing good things. The Charlotte County Sheriff's Office honored two teenagers Friday who rescued the driver of a submerged car at the intersection of Collingswood and Toledo Blade boulevards on Dec. 29. Chris Graniero, 15, of Punta Gorda and his friend, Chad Adams, 16, of Gulf Cove, were making a video when they saw two cars collide. One car, with a female passenger inside, plunged into the canal and began to submerge. Adams wasted no time. He jumped into the water and pulled the woman from the car. Graniero helped him pull the woman to dry land before Charlotte County EMS arrived. The woman was taken to the hospital and treated. Hopefully, anyone in the same situation as Graniero and Adams would have done the same thing. Both young men would probably tell you as much. They don't believe they did that much special. But the instincts they showed and the results of their action -- a woman's life may have been saved -- deem their efforts worthy of recognition. Another local teenager, Ryan Allender, may be even more courageous. A teenager's life is often defined by how he or she rates with their peers. Respect is not always easy to earn. Allender put his reputation on the line earlier this year when he, and a friend, were offered oxycodone pills by a classmate. It didn't take Allender long to do the right thing. He told his teacher -- almost unheard of in the teen community where the normal approach is hear nothing, see nothing and do nothing. The girl who offered the drugs was arrested. Allender did pay a price. For days some of his friends shunned him. Eventually, however, things returned to normal and Allender says today that he would never hesitate to take the same action. We need more teens like Allender. Drugs are bad. Recreational use and experimenting too often lead to addiction. Teens too often do not take the potential dangers of drugs seriously enough and sometimes their friends, or themselves, suffer because of that. If more teens took the same approach to drugs as Allender, we would find fewer drugs in the corridors of our schools and many young people might be spared the anguish and repercussions of a life of drug use. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin