Pubdate: Sun, 08 Apr 2007 Source: Santa Maria Times (CA) Copyright: 2007 Lee Central Coast Newspapers Contact: http://www.santamariatimes.com/contact/letter/ Website: http://www.santamariatimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/396 Author: Josh Petray, Staff Writer DARE ELIMINATED AT GROVER BEACH SCHOOLS DARE is designed to keep kids off drugs, but students from Grover Beach, Grover Heights and North Oceano elementary schools won't get the benefit of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program this year unless an outside organization can step in to help. The program was temporarily eliminated from the three schools in 2007 because of a lack of funding and staffing, according to Grover Beach Police Chief Jim Copsey. "We would love to do it," Copsey said. "(But) we don't have money to do it. I don't have any staff to put on the program." DARE was established in San Luis Obispo County and the city of Grover Beach in 1988 through the Sheriff's Department, but a program wasn't initiated in the city until 1995. Since then, it has provided a curriculum focusing on teaching kids to recognize and resist the pressures that lead to drug use. "We believe it is currently the best program for educating the youth of our community about the harmful effects of drugs, alcohol, tobacco and violence," the Web site states. But there is hope for the future of the DARE program in Grover Beach. Copsey said the department is looking at alternatives. "We're trying to work with the Sheriff's Department to possibly get somebody to come in and do it before the end of the year this year, but as of yet, that has not materialized," Copsey said. "Without a person to do it, I don't see it happening next year either," he added. At Grover Heights Elementary School, Principal Dan Block said the school's Parent-Teacher Organization drafted letters to the Sheriff's Department seeking outside assistance for the program. "This year, I've had several parents of sixth-grade kids just concerned about the drugs that they're going to be exposed to," Block said. "They've found that's a key year before most kids are exposed to it, and it teaches them to just say 'no.' Their curriculum is more extensive than that, but that's just the base of it." Block is taking extra steps at Grover Heights to see the program through. "I've been working with many organizations to see that we can still have it," Block said. "The best-case scenario is (having it presented by) a local police officer, like from Grover Beach. We're still hopeful for a solution. We just would love to not see this group of sixth-graders miss out on the program." North Oceano Elementary School Principal Mike Miller said the program has been well-received by parents. "There's a lot out there written about the DARE program, and that raises concerns if it's not working," Miller said. "But what we find in the years past is that when Grover Beach was able to provide an officer, it makes a wonderful connection for our students to our community. It's a positive thing for us." Miller added the program was also successful when handled through the Arroyo Grande Police Department. The program actually helped solve a case of numerous rooms being trashed on campus, he said. "We had a really bad vandalism occur about five years ago," Miller noted. "It was through the DARE program that we were able to catch the perpetrators." A call to the Grover Beach principal was not returned by press time. Since 2005, two Police Department positions were eliminated because of budget constraints, with one of those facilitating the DARE program, Copsey said. From 2005 to 2007, the Grover Beach department contracted with Arroyo Grande Police Department to provide the program, funded, in part, through parent-teacher organizations. Through DARE, students get lessons on how to manage peer pressure and anger, avoid gang and other violence and improve self-esteem as well as other methods to cope with societal pressures. "I'm 100 percent in support of DARE and our involvement in the schools, and I think all of our schools are supportive of it as well," Copsey said. "It's just a matter of logistics. We're looking at alternatives to be able to try and facilitate DARE." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath