Pubdate: Mon, 24 Mar 2008 Source: Smithers Interior News (CN BC) Copyright: 2008, BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.interior-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1631 Author: Quinn Bender READING, WRITING AND MARIJUANA IN SMITHERS SCHOOLS Drugs are being sold in Smithers schools. And the buyers are getting younger. After a drug bust at Smithers Secondary School earlier this month, principal James Cameron is calling on parents to "wake up" and realize there is a very real drug problem in Smithers. "There is a serious issue around drugs in our community -- period... And the schools would be a reflection of the community," he said. "Drug dealers are always in the schools. They're often, remarkably, people we don't know, so it's not the typical people you'd think. And for some reason you just never ever catch drug dealers. This case was a fluke." Cameron was responding to an incident earlier this month when a teenager, described as an upstanding Grade 10 student, was singled out for selling pot to four eighth graders. The middle school students were caught smoking marijuana on Hudson Bay Mountain during school hours, and volunteered the name of the boy who sold it to them. The 10th grader was expelled, a rare punishment in today's public school system. But due to the young age of the users, the school chose a more drastic punishment to send a clear message that drug sales will not be tolerated, said Cameron. The boy's reason for dealing the pot was also a major concern. "He's not a big-time dealer, and he doesn't even need to deal. He has money and a job," Cameron said. "This was about status." The usual policy for in-school suspensions had been highly effective in at least keeping young offenders enrolled in school and current with their studies. But this year, the rise in repeat offenders has left the school reaching out to other community organizations for help. "We're suspending kids while they're [already] suspended," said Cameron. "They're smoking pot early in the morning before they serve their in-school suspension for smoking pot." Pervasive drug use, particularly marijuana, has been a regular topic at the committee meetings of Crime Prevention Through Social Development (CPSD). Matt Davey, the Smithers' community safety officer, said the issue has been "bubbling to the surface" since Christmas, but in the last six weeks has boiled over as an issue of major concern with the CPSD. "It's happening with a younger crowd than usual," said Davey. "It's usually the norm that the Grades 10, 11 and 12s would be responsible for that behaviour, but we have a particular group in Grade 8 and 9 that [we're] struggling with." The CPSD is working with the high school to develop a youth mentoring program this April for a preselected group of six at-risk youth. "There's been a breakdown in communication between the business community, the RCMP and the general public with youth," said Davey. "We're just looking for ways to reestablish that connection," said Davey. According to Cameron drug abuse is not at the forefront of daily high school life, but the growing acceptance of drug use should be triggering alarms with parents. He said there's an 85 per cent chance children over the age of 16 who experiment with drugs will not develop addictions or dependencies, but with children under the age of 16 there is an 85 per cent chance they will. "There's a dark alley in our town, and people don't pay attention to it. Just talk to the people at Emergency or the staff at the needle exchange program." In 2007 a needle exchange program handed out 60,000 needles, with more than double that number returned, indicating a much higher, but incalculable rate of intravenous drug use in the Bulkley Valley. At the time staff had warned the public users were getting younger each year. Cameron said the high school drug problem is almost exclusively limited to pot, but a perceived rise with the heavy intravenous drugs warrants a note of concern. "People don't realize how prevalent drugs are. When their kids go to a party, there will likely be drugs there. Most of it's pot, but there's a lot of E [ecstasy]. Parents need to pay attention to what their kids are doing." Smithers Secondary principal calls drug problem serious, users getting younger - --- MAP posted-by: Derek