Pubdate: Sun, 14 Jan 2007 Source: News-Times, The (Danbury, CT) Copyright: 2007 The News-Times Contact: http://www.newstimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/637 Author: Susan Tuz, staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) RIDGEFIELD POLICE JOIN FIGHT AGAINST DRUGS IN SCHOOLS RIDGEFIELD -- By February, a school resource officer will be back on duty at Ridgefield High School. A police officer was stationed in the high school in 2001, but by the 2003-04 school year, the position had been eliminated due to budget cuts. With the death of Ridgefield High senior Joseph Lucisano on Nov. 14 in a suicide related to drugs his mother believes he got at the high school, school and town officials assert an officer should be returned to the high school as soon as possible. School resource officers play a key role in controlling the presence of drugs in schools, according to police spokesmen in Ridgefield, Newtown and Danbury. "We have had four drug arrests at the high school this year," said Newtown High School Resource Officer Domenic Costello. "Three were for possession and one was for sale of marijuana. I honestly believe the presence of drugs at the school has been curbed due to my view on drugs. Nobody's tougher on drugs than me, and the administration is right there behind me." Ridgefield Police Capt. Steven Brown, who supervisors that department's program for police in the schools, agrees. Speaking of the incident in the 2005-06 school year when a traffic guard was arrested for selling marijuana to students at Ridgefield High School, Brown said he thought that the presence of a school resource officer "would have made that activity a lot more difficult." "Going back to our experience of having an SRO at the school, the SRO was part of that school community and stayed on top of the situation, watching for dangerous situations to keep them from happening," Brown said. Brown noted that students at the high school held then-School Resource Officer Fernando Luis in high regard. "Luis was well liked and had a positive effect at the high school," Brown said. "The kids came to him and talked to him." The $18,000 to pay for the Ridgefield officer for balance of this school year will come from the town budget's contingency line. Money for two school resource officers for the 2007-08 school year, one at the high school and one to cover the town's two middle schools, will be part of the budget discussion for that year, Ridgefield First Selectman Rudy Marconi said. The funds would come jointly from the town and the education board from a new budget category called security. Police officers keep a high profile in the schools they serve. Costello is at Newtown High from when school starts at 7:30 a.m. until after 2 p.m. when it ends. When classes are changing, Costello is in the halls making his presence known. At lunch, he is in the cafeteria. "I think I've gotten the message across that I'm there to talk to," Costello said. "A number of the kids drop in to my office." In past years, Newtown High School had a marijuana problem and heroin was present in the school. In 2002, 57.3 percent of all high school juniors and seniors reported using marijuana. By 2005, that percentage stood at 43.3 percent. Heroin use was being reported and at a school board meeting in August 2006, it was reported that 10 Newtown youths were being treated for heroin addiction. Costello feels that trend is changing due to his pro-active approach and that of his predecessor, Officer Steve Ketchum, and of the schools' administration. This school year, the Newtown Police Department's K-9 unit started coming into the high school to sniff lockers and cars in the parking lot for drugs. The dog was brought in at the request of the Newtown Board of Education at parents' urging. It has been brought to the school twice, once before school started to get a baseline reading and once after school started. No drugs were found. Costello's presence goes beyond that of being a monitor in Newtown. He talks to classes about drunken driving and crime prevention. Luis did the same thing in Ridgefield before his position was eliminated. "Officer Luis taught classes as part of the health curriculum," Brown said. "Those classes were a combination of law-related education and a high-school level D.A.R.E. program." D.A.R.E. stands for Drug Abuse Resistance Education. It is a national program of police officer-led classroom lessons that teaches children how to resist peer pressure and live productive drug-free lives. As Ridgefield High's school resource officer, Luis was also there as a resource for the school administration. "I remember Principal Joe Ellis was very appreciative of the program," Brown said, "especially on 9/11 when the SRO helped come up with a plan for what the school should do that day to handle the situation with the students." Luis still teaches the D.A.R.E. program for 5th-grade students in Ridgefield. In Danbury, at Broadview Middle School, the school resource officer, Bob DiNardo, teaches an anti-bullying course to 6th-graders. "I teach the kids that doing the right thing isn't always easy, but it's always right," DiNardo said. "The students come in to the 5th grade as kids and leave after the 8th grade as young adults." DiNardo meets and greets the kids when they come into the school in the morning and keeps a high profile all day. He deals with student arrests by bringing the student and the parents into his office, where he is as much a counselor as a police officer enforcing the law. "I'm a liaison between the police department, the school and the parents," DiNardo said. "If a patrol officer has a problem with one of our students outside of school, he makes the initial contact, then lets me deal with the student at the school." DiNardo teaches the students that it is their responsibility to keep the school safe for each other as much as it is his. He encourages students to come to him and report anything that could be of danger. "I get them thinking, 'We have a say in keeping our school safe,'" DiNardo said. "What I teach them is to make the right choices." DiNardo has been the school resource officer at Broadview since 1994. In that time, he has never made a drug arrest at the school of 1,100 students. Arrests at the school are usually for criminal mischief or breach of peace or assault. And they are rare, he said. "Sometimes, a kid will pull a fire alarm. That's criminal mischief," he said. DiNardo believes he plays a key role in preparing students to move on to high school and to conduct themselves with respect for each other and for themselves. Danbury High School has two school resource officers inside the building and two rotating officers who patrol the perimeter and the parking lot at the school. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin