Pubdate: Mon, 27 Nov 2006 Source: Sentinel, The (Carlisle, PA) Copyright: 2006 The Sentinel, a division of Lee Enterprise Contact: http://www.cumberlink.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4268 LOCAL EFFORTS HELP BATTLE DRUG ABUSE Faced with a rising number of young teens getting involved with drugs and alcohol, the Cumberland Valley School Districts is inviting parents to become students for a night. On the curriculum -- the ABCs of stopping substance abuse. "Drugs 101" on Dec. 7 will teach parents how to recognize the signs their child may be headed for trouble -- and how to spot often innocuous-looking drug and alcohol paraphernalia. The two-hour program, put together with the Cumberland Valley Community Action Committee, will also bring parents up to speed on what's out there -- from stolen prescription meds and pot to inhalants, cocaine and heroin -- that could hurt their kids. Then parents will be sent home with a drug testing kit, so that if there's any doubt, they won't have to guess. The Cumberland Valley schools have been serious about reducing teen substance abuse for some time. High school students who participate in activities or drive to school, for example, are entered into a database for weekly random drug testing at school. Even so, in the first two months of this school year, 26 students have gone through disciplinary hearings related to substance abuse, as compared to 56 in all of last year. Noting that the kids in peril are getting younger, administrators are smart to acknowledge that sometimes the parents, through lack of information, are the last to know. "You always want to think it's not your kid," Assistant Superintendent Mary Riley said in a Sentinel report Sunday. "You want to believe them." Also on Sunday, The Sentinel reported on the new Cumberland County Treatment Court Program, set to begin next month. An alternative to conventional punishment through the justice system, the idea behind the so-called "drug court" is to keep people with substance abuse problems from repeatedly clogging the courts and the county jail by helping them get clean once and for all. A select group of nonviolent criminals will be offered the chance to avoid jail if they complete a four-phase program that typically takes about 18 months. What is good for the offender promises to be good for Cumberland County. Nationally, recidivism rates for drug court graduates are between 4 and 29 percent as compared to 48 percent for nonparticipants. It is also more directly cost effective -- a year in jail can cost between $20,000 to $50,000 per inmate, while a drug court alternative runs between $2,500 and $4,000. The county program aims to change adult behavior well after an individual problem has become a societal one. By arming parents with information, Cumberland Valley's Drugs 101 hopes to halt the cycle of substance abuse and crime before it gets started. Both are necessary efforts if drug-related crime and the tragic loss of human potential are to be reduced. And maybe if enough schools offered programs like Cumberland Valley's, the need for a county drug court would be lessened as well. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine