Pubdate: Thu, 25 Oct 2007
Source: Today's Sunbeam (NJ)
Copyright: 2007 Today's Sunbeam
Contact:  http://www.nj.com/sunbeam/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4423
Author: Randall Clark
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

SCHOOL OFFERS DRUG TEST KITS TO PARENTS

PENNSVILLE TWP. It's no secret in this day and age that  drug problems 
exist in just about every high school,  leaving many parents with a 
helpless feeling as they  send their children off each day and begging 
the  difficult question of "what can we do about it?"

Pennsville Memorial High School may have found a  solution.

In a revolutionary initiative brought before district  parents Tuesday 
night by the Partners in Prevention, 47  home drug-testing kits were given 
away in an attempt to  immunize families from the kinds of struggles 
that  accompany this global epidemic.

The kits, developed by Dr. Gianni DeVincent Hayes,  founder of American 
Drug Testing Consultants, have the  ability to test for just about every 
recreational  street drug available on the market today, 
including  alcohol. Parents at the presentation and distribution  of the 
kits on Tuesday said it is something that  provides peace of mind for them.

"You know with children, you love them to death but  still worry about the 
decisions they are making and if  you are doing everything you can as a 
parent," said  Rosemarie Hoffman, a teacher within the district and  parent 
of two students there one a high school senior  and the other an 
eighth-grader. "The program does  empower us at home, I feel I'll be better 
able to  control a situation now."

According to Bill Smithoover, the district's Substance  Awareness 
Coordinator, the idea is for the kits to act  as a deterrent for kids who 
are thinking of using  drugs, giving parents the ability to monitor them 
at  home and if need be, provide a type of private intervention.

In a very timely display, the distribution of the kits  fell on Red Ribbon 
Week, a national movement of adults  and children united for a drug-free 
society.

Smithoover, who initially proposed the idea last  spring, said that the 
pilot program has seen favorable  reactions so far, especially in light of 
the  alternative that had been tossed around of random drug-testing to be 
administered by the school.

"There is a certain fear factor this imposes on  children, but its not 
meant to be a sneak-attack but  just the opposite, it's meant to be out 
there in plain  view and prevent drug and alcohol use from the beginning," 
Smithoover said. "In social situations I  think it provides an out,' kids 
being pressured can  save face by saying they could get tested and it 
would  prevent them from being labeled a chicken."

Jody Mortarulo is a mother of two high school students  and one middle 
school student in the district, all  boys. She knows that drug use is a 
hidden dilemma with  far-reaching ramifications, and that even though 
her  boys are great students-athletes with great personalities, anyone can 
be affected. For her, she  went to show her support of the school's 
proactive  approach and above all, to show her children that she  cares.

Smithoover said he hopes that people realize how much  the school cares, too.

"I get the sense that Pennsville has as much of a  problem as anyone else 
does, it would be foolish to say  there is any community that doesn't have 
their share of  drug problems," Smithoover said. "We are willing to  admit 
that and move forward, move toward an answer that people agree upon."
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