Pubdate: Fri, 26 Jan 2007 Source: Flower Mound Leader (TX) Copyright: 2007 Star Community Newspapers Contact: http://www.flowermoundleader.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3561 Author: Chris Taylor, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) LISD RAISING AWARENESS ON TEEN DRUG USE The Lewisville Independent School District recently posted a letter to parents on their Web site concerning teen drug use. "As we begin this New Year, the Lewisville Independent School District is embarking on a renewed effort to better educate and assist students and their parents in the area of drug and alcohol prevention," is the first sentence in the letter to parents. According to school officials, 31 percent of students in fourth through sixth grades, and 71 percent in seventh through 12th grades reported using some type of substance in their lifetime. "In the police department's experience, we've seen that any school in any city a student can probably score what they want either today or the next day," said Richard Douglass, Lewisville Police spokesperson. It's because of that fact that LISD is taking steps to combat the problem. "We have just started the education process, but before that it was something we were looking at," said Tohma Morrison, LISD spokesperson. The goal of the letter, he said, was to inform parents, and is not in response to any one incident. Some of the steps that will be taken are: designating a Safe and Drug Free Coordinator to oversee the district's program including direct assistance for families who are experiencing the trauma of drug or alcohol use, initiating a school/community task force to address the issues of drug and alcohol use in the LISD communities and creating an online presence for staff, parents and students specifically related to drug and alcohol education. Along with the steps that the district is planning, parents are also urged to take steps of their own. The first recommendation is to talk to children about drugs and the consequences of using them. Parents are also urged to lock up prescription drugs so children will not take them to school. Prescription drugs are an easy, dangerous way for kids who want to get high to do so. Many adult cabinets have many types of prescription drugs in them, Rebecca East said. East is the mother of Michael Damien Anderson, a Marcus High School student who died of an overdose in December of 2006. East walks into his room where a computer still hums, and posters of bands hang on the walls. A black guitar sits on a stand near Damien's bed. East points to a corner between the bed and the computer. "This is where I found him," she said. She was not able to find her son one morning and went looking for him. "As I went into his room and called his phone, that's when I saw his legs," she said. East says that Damien was an "A" student, and not one that people would normally associate with doing drugs. "They say to watch for the signs, but there were no signs. His grades were great. He had never been in a fight. Damien didn't show the signs," East said. Admittedly still dealing with her son's death, East says she is willing to fight to let other parents know what is going on in the schools. "The most miserable thing is to not have your child," she said. Marilyn Harbour knows that pain all too well. Harbour lost her son, Josh, more than a year before Damien died. Harbour said she has been waiting 13 months to hear exactly how her son died, but she knows it was drugs. "When you lose your child, you almost become stuck in time," Harbour said She sleepwalks through the days, but works to keep a roof over her head, she said. Harbour show pictures of her son at his 17th birthday, which was his last. She has pictures of the two of them at concerts and on vacation. The two were close, she said. East said there are so many things that run through her head now that Damien is gone. "There will be no college, no guitar playing, no grandchildren," she said. Both boys liked playing music, and both liked to write. Damien was interested in journalism and Josh liked writing songs and poetry. "There is nothing greater than what we have been through," Harbour said. East and Harbour both think that there is a problem with drugs in the district and the city; however, they say they do not blame anyone. "We both lost children. We think the drug problem is pretty bad," Harbour said. East and Harbour say their goal is to educate and inform parents of teens what is going on. They say that many parents do not know that teens will take prescription drugs to get high or take part in things like "the choking game." In "the choking game," teens will find a way to cut off the supply of oxygen to the brain until they pass out, after regaining consciousness, the teen, allegedly, feels a high. Harbour said she found out Josh was doing this, and says that is where parents need to be informed about these trends. Tohma Morrison agrees with the two mothers. "We're not naive enough to think that there are no drugs in the schools," he said. The district is recruiting parents and civic leaders for their support in their quest against teen drug use, Morrison said. "We have to do this as a partnership. Schools can't do this alone," he said. A major piece of that is educating parents, he said. East agrees, and that is why she and Harbour have made it a point to do their best to inform parents as much as possible. "Wake up parents before your children don't," East said. Both have decided to use their tragedy as motivation to help others. "Losing the children is worthless unless we save some," Harbour said. At noon on Feb. 11, East is sponsoring a bike run which will start at Canuck's 1102 Texas Street in Lewisville. There will be nine different stops, and those without bikes will be able to ride in a decorated trailer. The fee is $10 per person with the proceeds going to the LISD Drug Awareness program. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek