Pubdate: Sun, 04 Jun 2006 Source: Courier News (Bridgewater, NJ) Copyright: 2006 Courier News Contact: http://www.c-n.com/c-n/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2163 Author: Pamela Sroka Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) HILLSBOROUGH SCHOOL ENLISTS PARENTS IN FIGHT AGAINST DRUGS HILLSBOROUGH -- The parents who turned out for a recent "Drug Awareness Night" at Hillsborough Middle School did not have to be persuaded of the threat that illegal drugs can pose to their children. "I think it'll rise anywhere if you don't stay on top if it," said Andy Christian, who has a daughter in seventh grade and a son in fifth grade. "The potential is always there. It can happen in a good or bad community." Michael Nenlsen, whose son is an eighth-grader, said, "Events like this educate the community. ... It all comes down to the parents. They need to take a role in their (children's) lives." Sam Jackson, said his daughter, Rachel, 15, an eighth-grader, had told him he didn't have to come if he didn't want to. But Jackson, who also has children in the 9th and 11th grades at the high school, said, "It's part of my responsibility as a parent to show up when they have these events." The May 18 event, which featured workshops and skits by the middle school's Student Leadership Corps, an extracurricular school club, drew about 50 parents. During one skit on heroin use, Dylan Zebro, 14, a Hillsborough Middle School eighth-grader, told the parents: "Talk to your children before they make a mistake that can ruin the rest of their lives." Rhonda Brown said she maintains "open communication" with her eighth-grade son and two teenage daughters but because it is impossible to watch them at all times. "We have to trust our children and keep our fingers crossed," she said. Reports of an increase in heroin use by high-school students prompted selection of heroin as the theme of the event, said Anna Mahler, student assistance counselor at Hillsborough Middle School. "We figured it's time," she said. Heroin use had been referenced by township police Chief Robert K. Gazaway on May 9 during a discussion by the Township Committee about funding a second high-school drug and alcohol counselor in the 2006 school budget, after rejection of the budget by voters. The committee decided to fund the second drug counseling position, at an annual salary of $62,935. Gazaway, who is retiring as police chief, told the committee that drug use was on the rise in Hillsborough. He cited two incidents in April 2005, both involving Hillsborough High School students trying to sell small quantities of heroin to undercover police in the parking lot of an Amwell Road shopping center. "What scares us is we've seen a lot more heroin," he said. "It's no worse than another community, but it's a lot bigger than it was a year or two ago." Jean Robinson, the high school's student assistance counselor, told the committee, "We have a considerable amount of students at the high school that are addicted to drugs." In response to inquiries from the Courier News, school district and township officials later said that the township committee was not provided with any prior year statistics to document the increase and Somerset County prosecutor Wayne J. Forrest said he was not aware of such a rise at the high school. "Not from our level," Forrest said. "If you're looking for a dramatic increase, you're not going to find it," said Hillsborough school superintendent Karen Lake. Kevin Davis, Hillsborough Township's business administrator, said, "The question isn't the number of kids using drugs. It is how many can be directed away from drug use. That is a hard number to quantify." Deputy Mayor Anthony Ferrera said, "The school board impressed upon us the extreme importance to the high-school students served by this position." Davis said the numbers provided to the township committee were all from the current school year and showed the following: School district officials were able to provide one year-over-year comparison: 18 high school students tested positive for illegal drugs in May 2006, compared to eight in April 2005. But it could not be learned how many students were tested each year. Students are referred for testing by a staff member if suspected of being under the influence at that moment at the school or their parents with consent by both the parent and the student. Under state law, if a student is suspected of being under the influence, Robinson said. Staff members refer the student to the vice principal, who then takes the student to the nurse for an immediate medical evaluation and the student's parents are called. Davis noted that $118,000 was spent this year for counseling of Hillsborough students at outside facilities, such as rehab centers. "But with an additional counselor, more of those kids may be kept in school, lessening the increasing cost for outside instruction," he said. Mahler, the only student assistance counselor at the middle school, also stressed earlier intervention. "We need to teach them before they get to the high school." Gazaway said the point of his comments at the May 9 meeting was, "We are concerned." Drug and alcohol abuse in Hillsborough this school year can be found in all grade levels, ages, races and ethnic groups, he said, adding, "It's not just the failing students. There's definitely an increase. Parents need to talk to the kids. We know there's more student use." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman