Pubdate: Tue, 26 Aug 2008 Source: Northfield News (MN) Copyright: 2008 Northfield News and Area Shopper Contact: (507) 645-6005 Website: http://www.northfieldnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4934 Author: David Henke Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) SIBLEY ASKS TO CONTINUE DARE PROGRAM WHO MET: Northfield School Board members, Sibley Elementary Principal Scott Sannes, Police Chief Mark Taylor, Officer Paul Haider and four sixth-grade graduates of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program at Sibley Elementary School: Erin Hahn, Meg Etzell, Noah Hile and Mason Lindenfelser. WHAT HAPPENED: Sannes, Taylor and Haider gave a brief introduction to the DARE program at Sibley, and then Hahn, Etzell, Hile and Lindenfelser all read their DARE graduation essays to the school board. WHAT THEY SAID: Taylor thanked the school district for allowing the police department to teach the DARE pilot program in three fifth-grade classrooms at Sibley and expressed the desire to continue and possibly expand DARE in the district's elementary schools. After working with students for 10 weeks as part of the program, Haider was very positive about the results of the pilot. "DARE does more than just give them alternatives," Haider said. "The mission of the whole program is to equip children with how to avoid negative influences. "It gives kids an introduction to a police officer and it gets somebody at the ground level in conversation with kids." Erin Hahn, one of the four DARE graduates who spoke during the program, said the program taught her a lot about making good choices and avoiding peer pressure. "I will always know what to do if I'm stuck in a sticky situation because of DARE," she said. WHAT'S NEXT: Scott Sannes asked for approval from the board to move ahead with the DARE program in the 2008-2009 school year at Sibley. After posing several questions to Sannes and Taylor, School Board Chair Kari Nelson expressed interest in continuing the program, which cost the Northfield Police Department roughly $2,000 to $3,000 in training and overtime expenses during the last school year. Nelson also discussed following up with the DARE graduates as they move through their sixth-grade year in the Northfield Middle School for additional retrospective feedback on the program. The school board will address the DARE pilot program and any possible expansion plans at their next meeting in the Northfield High School Media Center at 7 p.m. Sept. 8.