Pubdate: Sun, 25 Mar 2007
Source: Enterprise, The (MA)
Copyright: 2007 The Enterprise
Contact:  http://enterprise.southofboston.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3231
Author: Chazy Dowaliby, Editor
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

Series: 1 Of 6

A KILLER IN OUR MIDST

It began with a few police logs printed on our inside pages.

Then we published a couple of front page stories that caused people 
to pause before turning the page.

Enterprise managing editor Steve Damish thought he saw a pattern 
emerging from the stories and started to write about it in his 
column. He talked to some distraught parents. Then some more. Police 
weighed in here and there.

Criminal justice reporter Maureen Boyle, accustomed to delving into 
some nasty business in the course of her daily work, began talking to 
her law enforcement sources about the proliferation of cheap heroin 
and other opiates. The drugs were showing up in towns that rarely saw 
more than high school drinking binges geared to social events.

Damish and Boyle dug deeper, searched records, heard stories and 
shared heartrending conversations with people whose sweet suburban 
lives had been devastated by the kind of drug abuse most of us pass 
off as an urban scourge or a by-product of hopeless poverty.

Photo editor Craig Murray began his audio-visual chronicle of the 
seemingly endless graveside vigil of one young overdose victim, and 
became enmeshed in a months-long encounter with the sights and sounds 
of this devastation's aftermath.

Many more in our newsroom gathered information, edited materials, 
built our Web site's special report and pulled together to help shine 
a strong light on this dark and dangerous issue.

The irrefutable statistics -- the social, emotional and economic 
impact of opiate addiction in our suburbs -- are facts most 
communities seem unable to acknowledge.

But it is deadly. It is growing. And it is here.

Today, The Enterprise begins an in-depth, four-day examination of the 
insidious scourge that is killing off some of the best and most 
promising of our youths.

We are supplementing our newspaper report with extensive online 
information, slide shows, audio visual reports and resource materials 
for everyone affected by addiction.

We are committed not only to reporting this story today and this 
week, but to working with our communities to find solutions through 
awareness, education and civic action.

We will continue to report on the problem, and on the ways that 
schools, organizations and individuals are attacking it.

And we want to hear from you. Please give us your views, ideas and 
concerns and we'll share them with others who are looking for ways to 
help save a generation from killing itself.

Chazy Dowaliby, Editor
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman