Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jan 2008
Source: Evening Sun (Hanover, PA)
Copyright: 2008 Evening Sun
Contact:  http://www.eveningsun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3512
Author: Erin James

OFFICIALS - HANOVER HAS A DRUG PROBLEM

Drugs are a problem in Hanover.

Drugs like heroin, cocaine and marijuana are probably  here to
stay.

And even if you're not directly affected by drug  addiction, odds are
you know someone in the area who  is.

That's the type of straight talk delivered to about 40  people
gathered at a "town hall" meeting at the Hanover  Community Health and
Education Center on Tuesday.

"You can buy drugs anywhere you want in this town, and  you can buy
anything," Hanover Police Chief Randy  Whitson told the listeners.
"This room, with the  problem that we have, should be standing-room
only.  This room should be packed."

Most seats in the room were empty.

The meeting, sponsored by Hanover Hospital, gave  residents a chance
to hear from a handful of local  panelists who deal with the problem
of drug and alcohol  addiction from educational, legal and treatment
perspectives.

At the urging of some concerned residents, plans were  put into motion
last year for a meeting focused  specifically on substance abuse in
the Hanover area,  said Shiryl Mathai, a hospital representative.

In addition to the goal of opening eyes to an existing  problem,
Mathai said the hospital also wanted to  provide the community with
information on available  resources for battling drug and alcohol addiction.

"People want to know what's out there," he said.

But Cathy Mundorff told the listeners she found  resources were scant
when she began to look last year  for someone to reach out to while
dealing with her  son's drug addiction.

Very little existed in terms of support for family  members and
friends of drug addicts, she said.

So Mundorff recently started a support group called  Nar-Anon, which
is open to anyone in the area who is  affected by someone else's drug
use.

The group meets at 8 p.m. on Thursdays at St. Joseph's  Catholic
Church on Grandview Road.

Support is one aspect of the group, and education is  another,
Mundorff said.

"You have to learn that (addiction) is a disease," she
said.

Also at Tuesday's meeting, two local principals warned  listeners not
to take a passive approach to parenting  during their child's
middle-school years.

Experimenting with drugs and alcohol often begins  during a child's
pre-teen and early teenage years, said  Brad Arnold, assistant
principal at Emory H. Markle  Intermediate School in the South Western
School  District.

"Never say, 'It can't be my kid,'" he said.

Often when parents believe it is time for their child  to have more
freedom, it is actually the time to be  establishing boundaries, said
Pam Smith, principal of  Hanover Middle School.

"They really need it even though they'll tell you  differently," she
said.

Influences like MySpace.com and other Internet sites  should be
monitored closely by parents, both educators  agreed.

But when preventative methods don't work, there are  options for
treating drug addiction.

A new medication called Suboxone eases the symptoms of  drug
withdrawal and is available in the Hanover area,  said Dr. Susan Peck,
whose husband Dr. Michael Peck  operates a local clinic that now
offers the drug.

Similar to methadone for heroin addicts, Suboxone  reduces the
influence of cravings so the drug addict  can gradually lose their
dependency on the drug they  are addicted to, Susan Peck said.

While many panelists offered listeners potential  resources, Whitson
provided the purest dose of reality.

Whitson said he sees heroin as the drug most on the  rise in use, but
cocaine and others are still  widespread problems.

About 30 percent of the police department's calls are  directly
related to drugs, and anywhere from 60 to 75  percent are indirectly
related, Whitson said.

The war on drugs has not been effective anywhere,  including Hanover,
the police chief said.

"We're losing," he said. "We're losing badly."
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