Pubdate: 29 Jan 2006 Source: Herald News, The (Fall River, MA) Copyright: 2006 The Herald News Contact: http://www.heraldnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3604 Author: Jay Pateakos, Herald News Staff Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) SWANSEA'S DARE CLASS CONTINUES SWANSEA -- After the death of Swansea's volunteer Drug Abuse Resistance Education Officer Lt. Robert M. Cabral on Nov. 5, it would have been understandable to see the DARE program be discontinued for the rest of the school year. But Cabral's fellow officers knew that the lieutenant would have wanted to continue the program for the good of the students, and officers from Somerset and Swansea have made that a reality. "After the tragic loss of Lt. Cabral, Somerset Police Chief Joseph Ferreira called us asking what his department could do to help keep our DARE program going," said Swansea Police Chief George Arruda. "Because our own School Resource Officer Shane Mello was not yet DARE-certified, Chief Ferreira said he had two officers that were willing to help keep our (DARE) program going." Ferreira gave credit to both Lt. Brian Leonard and Sgt. Jeffrey Cote for initially approaching him with the idea of the officers volunteering their services for Swansea's DARE program. Due to the budget cuts that hit the town of Swansea in 2002, Cabral had been teaching the DARE classes on a volunteer basis for the last three years and Leonard, Cote and Mello will continue that tradition. On Friday morning at 9:45 a.m. at Case Jr. High School, Mello and Leonard made their way into the first DARE class held in Swansea since Cabral's death. "It's extremely important to be involved with the youth," said Ferreira. "Swansea had a very successful program and Lt. Cabral did an awesome job with it." Ferreira said that either Leonard or Cote will assist in teaching the classes with Mello until he becomes DARE-certified. Arruda said that Mello had called out to DARE to receive a temporary certification as a DARE officer due to the circumstances behind Cabral's death, but because of the strict qualifications behind the international program, DARE officials refused to grant the request. "That's why DARE has the reputation it does," said DARE spokesman Scott Gilliam. "This is a very intense program recognized as one of the toughest courses a police officer can take. We're basically taking a police officer and making them into a teacher." Gilliam said Mello will have to go through a grueling two-week, 80- to 100-hour training session geared toward child development, classroom management and communication skills. "The importance of the DARE program is in the students seeing police officers in a different light than they might normally," said Mello minutes before his first DARE class. "You hope that these kids come away with the confidence and willpower to make their own decisions in life." Case Jr. High Principal Robert Monteiro said the volunteer actions of the three officers will help fill many voids for the students. "Starting the DARE program up again is very important emotionally, because many of these students were looking forward to their DARE class with Lt. Cabral," said Monteiro. "This will help to close the gap, something Lt. Cabral would have wanted." In 2005, 36 million children around the world -- 26 million in the United States alone -- benefited from the DARE program. It is currently in 80 percent of the nation's school districts. "The DARE program is so important in order to empower these students and give them the ability to keep safe beyond just drug and alcohol abuse," said Arruda. "We all feel a sense of responsibility to mentor the youth of Swansea like Lt. Cabral did. It is through his efforts that we feel responsible to move this program along." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom