Pubdate: Tue, 24 Jan 2006 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2006 Journal Sentinel Inc. Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/news/editorials/submit.asp Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Scott Williams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) COMMUNITIES MAY UNITE IN WAR ON DRUGS Support Strong For Proposed Countywide Coalition Waukesha - The struggle to keep Waukesha County kids away from drugs could get a $100,000-a-year boost if educators, police and others forge a new countywide coalition under consideration. Known as Drug-Free Communities, the coalition would be modeled after similar groups that have gotten federal funds to coordinate and expand anti-drug-abuse efforts in Milwaukee and elsewhere. Operators of the Milwaukee coalition have received $55,000 to help their suburban counterparts analyze the program's potential for reducing tobacco, alcohol and other drug use among Waukesha County children. In some places, Drug-Free Communities has included such activities as youth drug use surveys, town hall meetings and public policy initiatives. Activists in Waukesha County expect to decide within a month or two whether to launch a coalition and apply for federal funding. "If it's going to succeed, it has to be led by the community," said Marcia Jante, county executive director of the University of Wisconsin Extension, a local outreach of the UW System. "We have to have enough individuals - a critical mass - who are willing to work as a collaborative," she said. In addition to new programming ideas, the coalition would aim to coordinate existing efforts so that individual programs complement one another and information is shared among those working on education, prevention and treatment of youths. Jante and other advocates of the Drug-Free Communities approach have been conducting focus groups since October to gauge support among officials from area schools, police agencies, churches, hospitals and elsewhere. Although many participants recognize that Waukesha County already has programs in place to discourage kids from drugs, support for the idea of a new countywide strategy is strong. "There's more than enough prevention work to go around," said Claudia Roska, executive director of the Addiction Resource Council, a Waukesha-based facility that began offering services nearly 40 years ago. Ned Steuber, a drug treatment activist in Oconomowoc, said he believes more after-school activities for young people would help reduce drug use. "There's certainly room for improvement," Steuber said, "because there's a definite drug and alcohol problem with kids in Waukesha County." Members of the Waukesha County Board today will consider authorizing the UW Extension to pursue the coalition idea. If approved, the UW outreach will continue holding focus groups and conducting other research under the guidance of IMPACT Alcohol & Other Drug Abuse Services Inc., which leads a Drug-Free Communities coalition that began in Milwaukee County eight years ago. It is among 700 such coalitions nationwide funded through the Office of National Drug Control Policy in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Funding can total as much as $100,000 a year. Duncan Shrout, an associate director of IMPACT, said the program has strengthened Milwaukee County drug-abuse prevention, partly by getting more people involved and distributing more information where needed. Shrout said that while it is too soon to predict whether the concept will take hold in Waukesha County, proponents have been encouraged by a wide cross-section of community representatives who have attended the focus groups. "The very fact that people are in the same room moving in the same direction is a benefit," he said. "There is a real benefit to unification." IMPACT would not expand into Waukesha County but would simply help suburban officials get their own program started. Judging from research completed so far, Jante said, efforts to combat youth drug use in Waukesha County are not addressing the problem fully. "There are some real gaps in services," she said. Pat Kashmerick, community outreach coordinator for Community Memorial Hospital in Menomonee Falls, said such a coalition could help target resources and build on existing strengths. Despite advances in the war against drugs, Kashmerick noted, an illicit laboratory was raided in Menomonee Falls less than two years ago. "It doesn't hurt to have coalitions around these issues," she said. "These issues aren't going away." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom