Pubdate: Sat, 26 Jan 2008 Source: Hudson/St. Lazare Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2008 Lake of Two Mountains Gazette Ltd. Contact: http://pages.infinit.net/gazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4094 Author: Paul McTeigue TEEN DRUG ABUSE EVER-PRESENT Every now and then, the problem of teen drug abuse rears its head. The exact percentage of Hudson teens who use drugs more than three times a week is open to debate - local drug counselors have told me forty percent, a local high-school teacher estimated fifty percent, and various teens themselves have estimated anywhere between forty and seventy percent. So, a rather safe assumption can be made that half of our teens have serious drug problems. And, every now and then, various solutions - early drug education, more local activities, better transportation - are implemented with, hopefully, some effect. I believe these initiatives do have a positive impact and the efforts by many people in this regard are some of the finest work being done today in our community. Having lived this situation as a parent, I would like to add my two cents to the discussion. It is my view that it is the parents who are a major problem in this situation and therefore it is the parents who must become a major solution. Your child will probably try drugs - over ninety percent of our teens do. It is what you do next when you become aware that your teen has a problem that will determine how big a disaster you have on your hands. If you deny there is a problem, if you accept there is a problem but believe it's just a stage, or if you don't do anything because you feel powerless, then you will be a major contributor. Set rules for your teens, get drug tests from the local doctors and enforce a zero-tolerance policy, setup weekly talks with teachers concerning grades and behaviour, speak with the parents of your teen's friends and ensure they are onside, stick around the house more, get counseling. In short, you have a very small window in which to act as the slope you are now on is steep and slippery. Additionally, do not become an enabler to other teens. There are parents who operate their house like a drop-in centre, believing they are offering a safe haven when in fact they are one of the prime causes. Their actions enable teens to escape consequences at home, therefore destroying any positive efforts done there. Teen drug abuse is not the eight-hundred pound gorilla in the room - it is the eight-hundred pound gorilla that sits squarely in the middle of our town. As a community, we all have roles to play to help the parents. As parents, the responsibility is ours. Paul McTeigue - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin