Pubdate: Thu, 05 May 2005 Source: Daily Herald (IL) Copyright: 2005 The Daily Herald Company Contact: http://www.dailyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/107 Author: Erin Holmes Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) DISTRICT 207 TARGETS TEEN DRUG PROBLEMS Substance abuse prevention will become a full-time job in Maine Township High School District 207 next school year. The district is shelling out more than $260,000 for three new hires who will focus solely on discouraging and addressing teen drinking and drug use. The "student assistance program directors," one for each high school, will start July 1. Their appointments were approved by the board this week. Like other school systems, District 207 in recent years has made curbing drinking and drug use a priority through things like "24/7" policies that hold students accountable for their behavior all day, every day, and increased communication with parents. Such efforts have been credited by the Illinois Department of Human Services for an overall decline in teen drug abuse statewide. District 207's new plan of attack, officials say, will take that effort a step further. The new hires will be tasked with coordinating anti-drug programs, jump-starting others and serving as prevention point people, ideally creating a streamlined and more aggressive approach to fighting what admittedly is a societal problem, Superintendent C. Steven Snider said. "We are growing and improving our effort," Snider said. "As you continue to grow your outreach prevention initiatives, you reach a point where you must step to another plateau. And it was, we believed, time." Drug use, he added, "is a community issue, which requires a total community effort. And, as participants in that effort, we have an obligation." That obligation comes at a steep price: Jodie Reeser, hired for Maine East High, will get $81,520 in salary and pension contributions her first year; Kristine Hummel and Corri Ferdman, who will take the jobs at Maine South and Maine West, respectively, each will get about $90,200 the first year. It stands in stark contrast to the way things work in neighboring Northwest Suburban High School District 214, where employees at each school are given only a stipend totaling between $6,000 and $8,600 per school to head-up anti-drug and drinking programs. The district does not employ full-time substance abuse staff, and Bill Johnson, who oversees the district's cumulative efforts on that front, said that's never even been a consideration. "I don't know if that's the most optimum use of resources," Johnson said. He said he believes District 214's method, which includes forging partnerships with rehab agencies, has proven effective. Two District 207 school board members, Ed Mueller and Marijo Bustos, in January expressed their concerns over spending so much money on the three new hires. Mueller has said he'd prefer a trial run with just one full-timer for now. But the principals have come out in favor of the new plan: Maine East High Principal David Barker has said he backs the new hires as an educator and as a taxpayer. Maine South Principal David Claypool said he's seen parents so hungry for more details on fighting drugs "you can see it in their eyes." The new hires could facilitate more communication with the parents, Snider has said, and also work with students who are identified as having a substance abuse issue or addiction. The latest data from the Illinois Youth Survey, a study administered to more than 5,000 students in eighth, 10th and 12th grades statewide, shows an overall drop in alcohol and drug use by teenage students. In 2002, the most recent year of data available, 41.5 percent of respondents living in Cook County but outside the Chicago Public Schools system said they'd tried some sort of alcohol or drug substance. That's down from 43.6 percent two years earlier, in 2000. The number of respondents reporting use of alcohol specifically also saw a minor drop, going from 37 percent in 2000 to 36.6 percent in 2002. The use of marijuana by kids in that category, though, actually climbed slightly from 2000. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin