Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jul 2006 Source: Daily Record, The (Parsippany, NJ) Copyright: 2006 The Daily Record Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.com/customerservice/forms/letters.htm#form Website: http://www.dailyrecord.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/112 Author: Navid Iqbal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) HANOVER PARK TO BRING COPS INTO SCHOOL DRUG BATTLE EAST HANOVER --Things are going to be different in the two Hanover Park Regional high schools starting as early as September. Both Whippany Park in Hanover and Hanover Park in East Hanover will be getting full-time police "resource officers" stationed in the schools, Superintendent John W. Adamus said on Thursday. He spoke hours after the Morris County Prosecutor's Office began rounding up drug abuse suspects in "Operation Painkiller." The investigation resulted in the arrests of nearly 60 people, mostly in and around East Hanover, Florham Park and Hanover, with most ranging in age from 16 to 25, authorities said. Nearly all are recent graduates or former Hanover Park Regional High School students, authorities said. Four are current students, Adamus said. Drug Testing Zeal The superintendent also said on Thursday that if he could have his way, the high schools would impose random drug testing on all students. State law, however, doesn't allow such a sweeping testing policy. It limits testing to athletes, students appearing to be under the influence of drugs, those who drive to school and other special circumstances, he said. "I would like to be able to drug test any kid in school ... if this student tested positive, we'd be working with the family to get the student into rehabilitation," Adamus said on Thursday. The police in the schools'plan represents a change from an earlier posture held by Adamus. East Hanover Mayor William Agnellino and Police Chief Stanley Hansen both said earlier this month they felt resource officers were warranted at Hanover Park but were waiting for a formal request from the school district to develop such a program. After the death of a former Whippany Park student, Holly Gillis, on July 1, Adamus was asked why schools don't have full-time police resource officers, despite recommendations from police. Adamus had replied that an "informal arrangement" with East Hanover, Florham Park and Hanover police who visit the school occasionally was "working quite well." However, somewhere after the prom night arrest of Gary Einloth Jr., 18, of Florham Park, on drug distribution charges; the July 1 death of Holly Gillis, of Whippany, and another Whippany Park graduate two weeks earlier; and Thursday's arrests, the superintendent and school board changed policy. Request For Cops Adamus said he and the board of education made requests to Hanover, East Hanover and Florham Park to develop a resource officer program. Town and police officials said they would be hammering out the details of this plan before the start of the next school year. "We expect to have resource officers in place in September,"Adamus said. School board President Jim Neidhardt did not return a phone message seeking comment. Adamus also said on Thursday that school officials have known "for well over a year"that authorities were looking into prescription drug abuse at the district's two high schools. The recent arrests do not indicate that the regional high school district is any more problematic when it comes to abuse of prescription drugs than other districts or other towns, the superintendent said. Police and town officials made similar comments. Parent's Experience Lois DeCaro, of Hanover, a member of the Substance Awareness Council, who set up a message board that has been teeming with questions about drug use from heroin to Oxycodone for many months, said "obviously we have a problem." When DeCaro's son told her he had drug problems, she said, that was the first step in getting him clean. "My son started using when he was a student at Whippany Park ...," DeCaro said. "Maybe the high school will admit they have things to address." DeCaro said she hopes the resource officer will help the students, rather than serve just as a law enforcement authority. "If that's just one kid that's saved from that hell, it's worth it." One young Hanover man had a different take on the Thursday raids, however. Paul Fenimore, 20, a recovering addict, and Holly Gillis' former boyfriend, who spoke recently at a Hanover Township Committee meeting, said the arrests may have the wrong effects. "I don't understand what they think they're going to accomplish with this thing," he said. "It's just going to make more kids smarter and craftier. I guess the police needed to do something and that the only thing they can do is arrest people. There's no clear answer." Communication Call Adamus, meanwhile, called on the Morris County Prosecutor's Office and other state agencies to provide regular information to him and other school administrators about any patterns of drug abuse or other law enforcement issues related to the school-aged population. "If we had a little more information from the prosecutor's office about what the trends were, we would benefit,"Adamus said on Thursday, suggesting that the prosecutor's office set up a "resource person" who administrators can call or even a secure Web site with the latest information on trends for school administrators. The district's plan for combating drug abuse involves a three-level effort of "enforcement, education and counseling" with counselors on campus ready to speak with students, Adamus said. Some students may not trust teachers, but he said he hopes the school resource officer would serve in part to combat that mistrust. He said students are only at the school for a certain number of hours a day and may be too keen to deal drugs on school grounds. But the district will do everything it can to push the drugs away, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman