Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jul 2006 Source: Chronicle, The (CN QU) Copyright: 2006 Media Transcontinental Contact: http://www.westislandchronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4097 Author: Wendy Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) LOOKING IN ON TEENS Teens Bored Easily: Haynes A teenager looking to score some pot approached Isabelle Prosnick and Josh Wisenthal in Valois Park several nights ago. "Do you guys have any weed on you?" Perhaps the teen overlooked their city uniforms, or else zeroed in on the word 'recreation' in the Pointe Claire Parks and Recreation logo emblazoned on their T-shirts. As Pointe Claire's designated liaison between the city and the teens who hang out in the parks, Wisenthal and Prosnick, both 22, say they get this kind of reaction often. "They don't see older people as interested in them beyond policing them. They see us and they think we must be either drug dealers or cops," Wisenthal explained. The mandate of these clean-cut, gregarious twentysomethings is to develop relationships with potentially troubled youths, find out what's on their minds, and bring this data back to the city at the end of the summer so that it can implement initiatives to better serve its teenage population. They drive between 80 and 100 kilometres a night, hitting the parks and schoolyards where teens are likely to loiter after-hours. In the weeks since they first ventured out, Wisenthal and Prosnick have chatted with adolescents who, although they are smart, well-spoken and have plenty of wealth at their disposal, feel powerless and disenfranchised by a system that treats them like cogs in a bureaucratic machine. They're also bored. "What the kids are telling us now are the same things I had complaints about when I was a teen," said Prosnick, who was born and raised in Pierrefonds. "There's nothing to do." Teenage mischief, the unfiltered encyclopedia of the Internet, and the tide of negativity from the media add up to a petri dish of factors that can lead to self-destructive behaviour. Stir some suburban ennui into the mix and it bubbles over, according to Shelley Haynes, Pointe Claire's social development section manager. "When they're bored, that's when the trouble happens," Haynes said, adding that the towns of Hudson and Saint-Lazare have parks dedicated to youth that offer activities like bonfires and dances. "They're still hanging out in the parks, but there, they're supervised." Pushing the envelope Wisenthal says he's completely "blown away," by how drug-savvy today's teenagers are. "When I was 14, it was a big deal to go to a drinking party, where maybe one person would get really drunk and puke, and there might be a couple people having sex," he said. Now, he says, teens are just as likely to talk about crystal meth, speed, or crack. "They know the street names, they know how buzzed you can get from it." According to the teenage addicts at the Portage rehabilitation centre in Beaconsfield, unsuspecting youths may be getting more than they bargained for when they toke up. "They told us some of the stuff sold on the streets is laced with harder drugs to give kids a better buzz so they'll get hooked and keep coming back to the same dealer," said Wisenthal, who visited the residential centre with Prosnick last week. "These sick, twisted people who are our age are pushing drugs onto kids ten years younger." Meeting 14-year-olds whose lives had spiraled out of control because of drugs convinced Wisenthal and Prosnick that the old adage that "kids will be kids" just doesn't cut it anymore. "That's just ignorance, man," Prosnick said. "Fifty years ago it was a different world. The consequences of drinking a beer when my parents were kids are different from the long-term effects of inadvertently taking speed or the date rape drug, or having unprotected sex," Wisenthal pointed out. "The kids in rehab talk about the same things as the kid on the street smoking a joint. The only difference is that these kids ended up doing cocaine instead of weed." A zone of their own Wisenthal cruises along the tree-lined avenues of Pointe Claire. "The problems may be masked by nice houses, but it's naive to assume that there aren't any just because there's money," he said, offering the example of the two-income household where neither parent is ever at home. "When the parents aren't as involved in their kids' lives, the kids turn to friends," added Prosnick. They pull into the parking lot of Dezone, the local teen drop-in centre located in a squat, nondescript building behind Cheers bar. Dezone youth worker Terrence Ramsay-Jones has seen it all -- suicide attempts, sexual assaults, gang violence. He also witnessed a boy ask his mother for $4,000 -- "and she gave it to him," he recalled. "This kid dressed like he was from the ghetto." "They're not hustling because they need the money, they're hustling because they're bored," said fellow youth worker Allan Hoyte. "Most of them just need someone to talk to," said Prosnick. "They're ignored." Hoyte and Ramsay-Jones offer teens exactly that -- a place to play cards or video games, or just chill out, in a supervised atmosphere. It's hard to tell the youth workers apart from the teens who use the centre -- all are dressed in slouchy baseball caps and baggy pants. As for Prosnick and Wisenthal, they hope their presence in the parks this summer will help to make Pointe Claire a more accommodating place for teens to have fun -- safely. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek