Pubdate: Sun, 11 Feb 2007 Source: Journal News, The (NY) Copyright: 2007 The Gannett Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.nyjournalnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1205 Author: Diana Costello STUDENTS GENERATE IDEAS TO PREVENT SUBSTANCE ABUSE Twelve-year-old Annie Gould is confident she will be able to resist drugs and alcohol, thanks to strategies she and other students developed yesterday at the Putnam County Youth Bureau's first Communities That Care Youth Summit. "Lots of kids get into high school and they're not ready for it because lots of people can pressure you," said Annie, a seventh-grader in Carmel's George Fischer Middle School. "I think it will really help us in the future." Held at the Putnam National Golf Club in Mahopac and supported by numerous county agencies and local organizations, the summit brought together about 80 Carmel and Mahopac students in grades seven through 12. The six-hour event was the latest piece of the Communities That Care initiative, which started in the spring of 2005 with a drug and alcohol survey going out to more than 5,100 children. The survey, supported by the state Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services, is meant to be conducted every three years. Results showed, among other things, that 72 percent of students said they had used alcohol, 38 percent said they had smoked cigarettes, and 33 percent said they had smoked marijuana. A series of focus groups reviewed and discussed the results. Janeen Cunningham, deputy director of the Youth Bureau, said she hopes the summit will become an annual event. She credited Carmel Schools Superintendent Marilyn Terranova and Mahopac Schools Superintendent Robert Reidy with helping make this year's summit a success, and said she hopes to bring more schools together next year. In groups of about 15, students brainstormed ways that schools, families and communities could create opportunities and rewards for children to keep away from drugs and alcohol. Adults stayed out of the discussions, leaving upperclassmen to take the lead. The groups then presented their ideas to the larger audience. One group wanted the schools to alternate hosting family dinner nights. Another wanted community service to be rewarded with free movie tickets or passes to amusement parks. A third group wanted the community to build a recreation center complete with an arcade, a swimming pool, computers and miniature golf. The goal is to take the ideas generated at the summit and make them a reality. "We want them to tell us what they want," Cunningham said. "As adults, enough is enough. We need to start listening to the kids." "It's not a school problem, it's not a parent problem, it's not a kid problem," added Naura Slivinsky, associate director of community relations for Arms Acres, a Carmel treatment center for chemical dependency. "We all have to pull together to address substance abuse." In addition to talking about preventing substance abuse, the summit also served to unite students who have a history of a fierce and sometimes violent rivalry. Students said it was another step toward alleviating the hostilities between the two districts. "I think, little by little, tensions are starting to decrease and things are getting better," said Steve Guigliano, 17, a Carmel High School senior. "It doesn't make sense that we even would have this rivalry," added Patty Daley, 17, a Mahopac High School junior. "We're all the same." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek