Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jan 2006
Source: Idaho Mountain Express (ID)
Copyright: 2006 Express Publishing, Inc
Contact:  http://www.mtexpress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2296
Author: Megan Thomas, Express Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

TEEN METH USE ALARMS SCHOOL OFFICIALS

Popular Drug Slowly Seeping Into Teenage Community

"Meth is almost like a body snatcher. It reaches out  and grabs these 
kids almost overnight." - Dr. Jim  Lewis, Blaine County School 
District superintendent

"This is a wonder drug for kids. They feel smart,  strong and 
invisible, and then they crash." - Barge  Levy, Silver Creek 
Alternative School director

Recognize Teen Meth Use

Indications your teen may be using methamphetamine  include:

* Change in grades

* Change in attitude

* Change in attendance

* Sudden shifts in peer groups

* Deteriorating health conditions

*Weight loss

* Nervous behavior, scratching

* Staying up late

* Breaking curfew

* Lack of hygiene

* Possessing unusual amounts of money

* Irritable behavior

* Secretive conduct

In December 2005, a Wood River High School student  tested positive 
for methamphetamine.

The result marked the high school's first positive  methamphetamine 
test this school year. Now, Blaine  County school officials are 
worried about teens' use of  and access to the highly addictive white powder.

"Boy am I worried about the kids in this community ...  I see more 
and more meth. That is very disturbing,"  said Barge Levy, Silver 
Creek Alternative School  director.

Similar concerns echo up and down the Wood River  Valley.

"I see kids that I have known or worked with since they  were in 
sixth grade that are basically going down the  tubes because of meth 
use," said Tod Gunter, Wood River  Middle School and Silver Creek 
Alternative School  social worker.

Alarm mounts, given the dangerous nature of the  substance.

"If you use meth, you are playing Russian roulette with  a really 
deadly drug," said John Blackman, vice  principal of Wood River High 
School, in Hailey.

Blackman speaks openly about his disgust with the drug.  His brother 
is a meth user. As vice principal, he  relays his personal experience 
to students who come to  his office.

A handful of students have entered Blackman's office at  the high 
school to take a drug test. Blackman's  responsibilities include 
administering drug tests to  students as set forth by the district's policy.

During the ongoing 2005-2006 school year, Blackman has  given 19 
tests. (Wood River High School did not provide  total statistics for 
the school.) The urine test can  detect traces of cocaine, opiates, 
THC (marijuana) and  methamphetamine. Of the tests given by Blackman, 
10  were positive--one tested positive for meth.

Jon Maksik, headmaster of The Community School in Sun  Valley, said 
he has not seen evidence of meth use at  the private school.

Although it is limited, evidence of meth use in the  schools 
indicates the popular drug is slowly seeping  into the teenage community.

"Definitely in the last two years I have seen a huge  increase in 
meth," Gunter said. "To be honest, some of  it may be that our policy 
as a school district has  become stricter. We are doing a lot more 
drug testing  ... but I think there has been an overall increase in meth use."

Alarm Among Educators

The notion that use of the drug is increasing is  disturbing to Dr. 
Jim Lewis, Blaine County School  District superintendent.

"Meth is almost like a body snatcher. It reaches out  and grabs these 
kids almost overnight," he said.

The school district responded to meth-related fears in  the community 
by organizing the first Community Drug  Summit Nov. 21, 2005, to 
discuss drug use among  students. The group plans to reconvene this month.

"The alarm has come through the school district. The  school district 
volunteered to be the vehicle to bring  entities together," said Tom 
Bailey, Hailey Elementary  School principal. Bailey served as the 
chairman of the  summit.

The school district gathered health professionals, law  enforcement 
officials, faith-based organizations and  other entities together to 
identify and attack the  problem.

"We brought the entities together to say, 'What can we  do?'" Bailey said.

Bailey believes meth may not be prevalent at the high  school, but he 
does see a need for action.

"With meth, you don't have the opportunity to just try  it, because 
it is so highly addictive," Bailey said.

Called the "poor man's cocaine," the highly addictive  stimulant 
threatens to hook users on the first try.

"That's the scary thing about meth. You don't get to  dabble," Bailey said.

Highly addictive and physically annihilating, meth's  long-term 
effects include brain damage, dramatic weight  loss, skin sores and 
corroded teeth.

Derek Brown, the Wood River High School resource  officer and a 
part-time officer with the Bellevue  Marshal's Office, sees all of 
the signs of meth use in  the greater community. He and others report 
observing  students exhibiting the symptoms associated with 
meth  use, specifically extreme weight loss and skin sores.

The physical effects come with a long lasting high and  a depressive 
crash that make recreational use virtually  impossible.

"Students can't party on Friday and be ready for school  on Monday," 
said Julie Carney, Wood River High School  social worker.

Attraction To Young Users

So, why does meth attract young users?

"This is a wonder drug for kids. They feel smart,  strong and 
invincible, and then they crash," Levy said.

The long lasting euphoric high and endless energy for a  relatively 
cheap price appeals to adolescents. School  officials said weight 
loss allures female students.

Availability of the substance also accounts for the  attraction. 
Educators blame the increase in teenage  meth use on easy access to the drug.

"They can get it any time they want. It is very  accessible," Levy said.

The absence of drug-dealing violations at schools  indicates that 
distribution occurs away from school.  Wood River High school reports 
no drug-dealing  incidents on campus this year.

"Most kids are buying and selling off school grounds,"  Blackman said.

Although the numbers indicate dealing and use occurs  away from 
school, officials agree that students seek  out avenues to drugs 
through peers at school.

"The high school is the ripest pickings for drug  dealers because 
(students) are all right there and  young and vulnerable," Lewis said.

Lewis said the times away from school, particularly  after school and 
weekends, emerge as the likely windows  for use.

Partying As A Precursor

Away from school, teens in the valley like to party.

"Is there a problem with drinking? Absolutely, it has  been there for 
years," said Graham Hume, Wood River  High School principal. "Is 
there a problem with pot in  the valley? You bet."

The concern over alcohol and marijuana abuse arises in  relation to 
meth. School officials say those  "recreational" drugs serve as a 
gateway to  methamphetamine.

"Parents will say, 'My kids won't do that,' but if you  impair (an 
adolescent's) judgement enough they might,"  Blackman said.

Blackman and Hume said that among their students  alcohol is the 
primary abused substance, followed by  marijuana.

A survey of students in 2002 gave the same indications.

The Blaine County School District offered an Asset  Survey in March 
of 2002 to measure risky behaviors  among teens. The survey conducted 
by the Search  Institute, a Minnesota-based nonprofit organization, 
surveyed 1,396 local students in grades six through 12.

The survey found that 31 percent of Blaine County  students reported 
using alcohol once or more in the  previous 30 days. Forty-nine 
percent reported attending  a party where peers were drinking in the 
previous year.

"These kids will be pressured to drink alcohol,"  Blackman said.

Drug tests given at the high school show marijuana is  the most 
abused substance.

"I don't think it's so much of an overall meth problem  as an overall 
drug problem," Brown said.

The ski-town lifestyle also affects teens' choices.

"In Blaine County, we are a resort community, a lot of  our focus is 
on parties," said Frances Nagashima, Youth  Adult Konnections (YAK!) director.

The party atmosphere contributes to social acceptance  of alcohol and drugs.

"There are more excuses made here in the valley, like  'It's a resort 
area, we came to party,'" Hume said.

At the same time, adults' acceptance of drugs and  alcohol seems to 
trickle down to teens.

"There is a drug problem at the high school," Gunter  said. "There is 
a drug problem at the alternative  school. But there is a drug 
problem in this community  ... and the kids are a reflection of what 
they are seeing in the community."
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman