Pubdate: Mon, 22 Oct 2007 Source: Nelson Mail, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 2007 Fairfax New Zealand Limited Contact: http://www.nelsonmail.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1069 DOPEY BEHAVIOUR It comes as no surprise that cannabis has once again been found at a Nelson high school, says the Nelson Mail in an editorial. This drug has been in our community for decades and its use is widely condoned. It would be naive to think that it hadn't penetrated the social lives of a great many teenagers. The surprise this time is twofold: that a group of Nelson College boarders have taken their use of the drug to the point where they set up their own plantation on school grounds, and that the school has demonstrated an admirable maturity in its reaction. It is of course not good for this old-established and esteemed school's reputation to have 11 boarders caught for using and growing cannabis. The find has drawn national publicity. The audacious Grampians garden will become the stuff of minor legend - and who is to say that it was a first? But principal Gary O'Shea has shown a fine sense of perspective in saying that the 15 and 16-year-olds involved have "obviously made some very silly decisions over the last few months" and refusing to condemn them. Instead, he has pointed out that the school does not have a "one strike and you're out policy", preferring to offer counselling. This, and his willingness to publicly discuss the cannabis find, offer encouragement that the boys' crimes will receive an appropriate punishment that won't blight the rest of their lives. After all, though they won't see it this way, they are barely out of childhood. Nelson police, too, have given a suitable response. The area commander, Inspector Brian McGurk, says that the boys will be dealt with in "a more educative than punitive" manner by police Youth Aid. That's good. In saying that cannabis consumption and sale is so widespread that there aren't the resources to pursue every dealer, Mr McGurk is doing no more than acknowledging reality. Regardless of whether or not decriminalisation of this drug goes ahead, police are right to concentrate on the more pernicious influence of harder drugs such as methamphetamine. As with the other drug that is widely abused, alcohol, the best way to address the problems caused by cannabis is to educate young people in the dangers of immoderate use. They need to know that it wasn't dubbed "dope" for nothing. Believing that it can be stamped out or that they won't try it is wishful thinking, and heavy punishment of school pupils will simply create martyrs. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek