Pubdate: Sun, 19 Nov 2006 Source: Grunion Gazette (Long Beach, CA) Copyright: 2006 Grunion Gazette Contact: http://www.gazettes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3434 Author: Carla M. Collado, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) COUNCIL MEMBERS PUSH FOR RETURN OF D.A.R.E. DRUG PROGRAM A popular anti-drug program for youth that suffered major budget and personnel cuts last year now has the support of several community leaders who are trying to revive it. At Tuesday's City Council meeting, Fifth District Councilwoman Gerrie Schipske asked City Manager Jerry Miller and Police Chief Tony Batts to look into the feasibility of increasing police resources to expand the DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education). "I want to find out if in fact we can reinstate it and get a handle on why it was cut," Schipske said. "The community seems to want to have it (back) in some format. It has been a very positive experience for a lot of school-aged children." DARE is a series of classroom lessons led by police officers, who teach students how to live drug- and violence-free lives. The Long Beach Police Department currently pays two retired police officers to run the DARE program, while the independently-run DARE board raises money to pay for classroom supplies and the officers' annual DARE training, according to Officer Rich Bargas of the DARE detail. Previously, the police department had five full-time officers and about three part-time officers in the DARE program. Bargas said the department had to cut back last year because various officers were reassigned and promoted, but never replaced. Now, Bargas and another officer teach 50- to 60-minute DARE lessons to fifth graders at eight public schools throughout the city. The DARE America curriculum -- which stands for Define, Assess, Respond, Evaluate --they use focuses on decision-making. Despite the program's cutbacks, Bargas said there is still a great desire in the community to keep it going. "The desire is there, but the manpower is not," he said. "And I really don't know the answer to that." Betty Thompson (DARE board member and director of health and safety for the Long Beach PTA Council) said the DARE board is offering the city $35,000 to help pay for overtime costs for former DARE officers to return to classrooms and to add 15 more schools. "I'm hoping they will bring back on two to three officers and then we can expand the program E get into more schools, give our kids a more positive view of our officers," Thompson said. Bargas agreed. He said with the increasing glorification of gangs on TV, children are getting involved in gangs at an earlier age. The DARE program is important because it brings the officers into the classrooms and helps children see the police in a more positive light, he added. "We have some kids we're dealing with that are really high-risk," Bargas said. "The only stability they have is in school, going to school. Our hope is that we can bend them from that thought of getting involved in gang violence." "When you teach kids, you're going to have them making better decisions," Thompson added. As part of Schipske's request, the city manager and police chief will report back to the City Council regarding the expansion of the DARE program at an upcoming meeting. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake