Pubdate: Sun, 28 Oct 2007
Source: Times Leader, The (KY)
Copyright: 2007 The Times Leader, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.timesleader.net
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4319
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

DRUG FORUM WARNS OF LONG-TERM BATTLE

How bad is the drug problem in our county?

Pennyrile Narcotics Task Force Director Cheyenne Albro  told the crowd of 
60 attending a community drug forum  Wednesday that the question is one of 
the most common  ones he hears when speaking about drug issues.

The answer is less than heartening.

"Per population, your drug problem here in Princeton  and Caldwell County 
is just the same as L.A., Miami,  New York and other areas," he said.

"All the same drugs that you deal with in other areas  eventually find 
their way here," he added.

The forum, "Not My Child! (Are You Sure?)," was  sponsored by the Caldwell 
County Champions Coalition,  the CCHS Champions Against Drugs club, the 
Caldwell  County Sheriff's Department, the Princeton Police Department and 
Kentucky State Police.

Rachel Bloodworth, one of the forum's organizers, said  parents should wake 
up to the reality that drugs are a  problem locally.

"Many of us think our children wouldn't do anything  like that because 
we've taught them better," she said.  "But that's out the window, because 
they are doing it.  It is our children."

Albro said winning the war on drugs required success in  three areas: 
enforcement, education and treatment.

Law enforcement cannot do it alone, he said.

"Drug abuse is a devastating disease. It's got a death  grip on our nation. 
The cure for that disease is you,  the public."

Prevention education is the key, he said.

The number one illegal drug problem in the area, he  said, is marijuana. 
"It has been and always will be,  probably, because of availability," he said.

Methamphetamine ranks about fourth, he said. "But it's  such a sinister drug."

The forum's second speaker, the Rev. Curtis McGehee,  chaplain for the 
Muhlenberg County Sheriff's  Department, highlighted meth's particular 
dangers,  including an addiction rate estimated at between 95 and  98 
percent -- 95 to 98 of every 100 people who try meth  will become addicted.

"In comparison to other drugs, this is overwhelming,"  he said. "I believe 
personally that it's the most  destructive drug on the planet."

An estimated 90 percent of meth users are either  incarcerated, 
brain-damaged or dead within five years  of first using the drug, he said.

In addition to its harm on the user, meth also poses a  threat to children 
and anyone else in a home where meth  is manufactured, he said. 
Furthermore, the discarded  toxic byproducts of the drug's manufacture pose 
a  significant environmental risk.

Every pound of meth manufactured generates between 5  and 6 pounds of toxic 
waste, he said.

Dealing with meth and other drugs requires involvement  from everyone, he 
added.

"It's not up to law enforcement alone to solve this  problem," he said. 
"This is a moral and a spiritual  problem this is one time when people need 
to come  together from every walk of life."

Albro concurred, and noted a need for greater parental involvement.

Too much of the responsibility for teaching morality  has been left to 
schools and churches, he said.

The message to stay away from drugs should begin at  home, and early -- "as 
soon as they can understand what  you're talking about," he said.

Albro pointed to Operation Parent, a program that will  hopefully take 
place in Caldwell County next spring,  that gives parents a firsthand look 
at common drugs and  their effects.

Common warning signs that children may be using drugs  can be as simple as 
a change in their appearance, the  way they dress or the friends with whom 
they associate.

Parents should also watch for unexplained weight gain  or weight loss, 
curfew violations, mood swings,  depression, items missing from the home, 
glassy eyes,  dilated pupils and reckless behavior.

All could be signs that a child is using drugs, he said.

For those who are already addicted, there are treatment options.

One of those options, the Western Kentucky Teen  Challenge, was discussed 
Wednesday by its director,  Robert Morck.

More than 190 Teen Challenge centers are now in  operation in the U.S., he 
said, and centers are located  on six continents around the world.

Centers are available for teens, adult men and adult  women, he said.

The Teen Challenge program, he added, is "widely  recognized to be the most 
successful drug program in  the world."

He pointed to a Northwestern University study showing  an 86 percent 
success rate for the Teen Challenge  program and its Christ-centered 
treatment plan,  compared with 4 percent for the average secular  program.

"Addiction takes the whole person," he said. "The war  has to be fought on 
all levels."

The treatment and recovery program takes between 12 and  14 months, he said.

Albro pointed out the distinction between  detoxification plans and 
programs that actually treat  the addiction itself.

"Psychological addiction may last for years, if not a  lifetime," he said, 
since the drug is often "the most  powerful thing that they have ever 
encountered."

"There are no quick fixes with addiction."

Continued support from the community is essential to  making progress in 
the drug war, said Sheriff Stan  Hudson, who declared drugs to be the cause 
of 90  percent of the problems encountered by law enforcement.

"I think if you continue to fight and continue to do it  as a community, 
you win as a community," he said.
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