Pubdate: Wed, 30 May 2007 Source: Peterborough Examiner, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2616 Author: Galen Eagle, Examiner Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) STUDENTS LEARN KEY MESSAGES ABOUT DRUGS, INTERNET It choked him up to talk about his son's suicide last year but Bill Bailey's message to Kenner Collegiate students yesterday was clear -- drugs do kill. Bailey, who spent 24 years as an educator, was a keynote speaker yesterday afternoon as the two-day conference on safe schools and anti-bullying wrapped up. The conference, which targeted Grade 9 students at Crestwood Secondary School and Kenner Collegiate, was a pilot project held in partnership with city police, Peterborough County OPP, the Ministry of Child and Youth Services, the John Howard Society and Microsoft. Presentations and workshops tackled issues including peer pressure, bullying, drugs and alcohol and the dangers of Internet technology. Bailey's message tugged at the heartstrings, bringing a few students to tears as he talked about the death of his son Adam, a former Adam Scott Collegiate student. He told students how his son's troubles began when he started casually smoking marijuana. "Adam and I discussed drug use and his favourite words were 'Dad, I do smoke pot and I have it under control,'" Bailey said. Marijuana was a gateway drug for Adam as he began experimenting with harder drugs, Bailey said. It was a mixture of those drugs, a beating he took from a drug dealer he owed money to and some other personal problems that drove Adam to take his own life, Bailey said. "Adam was found April 19 last year hanging from my garage. He died April 21," Bailey said. It was visibly hard for Bailey to tell his story, but he said it was therapeutic to know his message could keep another young teen from going down the same path. "I'm talking here because I want to make a difference," he said. "I can't change the history that has happened in my life, but if there's any part of my story that will help someone else, then that's worth it and I'm recovering." Another workshop yesterday explored the dangers of Internet sites such as Facebook, MySpace and MSN. Students need to know what they do online can be traced and cyber-bullying has consequences, city police high school liaison office Marc Habgood said. "We're building awareness here that everything you do online is traceable and you can be held accountable," Habgood said. Divulging too much information can also leave students vulnerable to online predators, Habgood said. Students learned how Trojan horse software can give a person control of someone's personal computer camera and a front-row view of their bedroom. They were shown how images of themselves posted on Facebook could be edited in Photoshop and depict them in compromising situations. With participation prizes such as iPods and free pizzas, students really took advantage of the two-day conference, Kenner Collegiate vice-principal Melanie Foulkes said. "When the kids come into Grade 9 now, they know what's available in the community and we can make their transition into high school a little easier," she said. Foulkes said she hopes both the public and Catholic school boards pick up the pilot program next year so all Grade 9 students in the city can benefit from it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake