Pubdate: Thu, 3 Apr 2008 Source: SouthtownStar (Tinley Park, IL) Copyright: 2008 Digital Chicago, Inc. Contact: http://www.southtownstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4719 Author: Kristen Schorsch TINLEY PARK PARENTS RALLY TO SAVE DARE Whenever Tinley Park fifth-grader Danelle Paulsen spots a police car, she checks to see if officer Bob Shervino is inside. The Tinley Park DARE officer has become Paulsen's newest friend. When she found out at school recently that the drug-awareness program could be no more, she was bummed, her father said. "To have it canceled is just a shame," said Ed Paulsen, whose daughter attends Keller Elementary School. Paulsen was among several parents who rallied Tuesday at a village board meeting to try to spare the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program from the chopping block. The DARE program uses two full-time officers and another working half time to regularly visit Tinley Park grade schools throughout the school year. Faced with trimming the village's 2008-09 budget, which received preliminary approval Tuesday night, Tinley Park trustees plan to shift the two full-time DARE officers to the streets after school lets out this year. The program costs about $40,000 in administrative overtime and another $30,000 in overtime for officers who fill in for the DARE officers when necessary, a preliminary budget shows. Paulsen saved his comments for after the village board meeting. Dorothy Pavlick, whose twin girls go to Central Middle School, made her voice known. She told trustees her daughters have fond memories of Shervino. "He was like a god in our house," Pavlick said. "What he said was the word. .. It's little programs like (DARE) that make an impact." Shannon Wodka worries her daughter Marleh, a fourth-grader at Memorial Elementary School, won't receive the same interaction with police officers. DARE is mostly for fifth-graders. "This is a way for the police department to come in and gain the trust of our children," said Wodka, adding that local moms have started a mass e-mail about the DARE program's possible demise. Wodka noted that she grew up in Sauk Village, where the school district was too broke to offer art, music and extracurricular programs. Tinley Park trustees don't want to scrap DARE, but they want a cheaper program. They plan to try to develop an alternative drug-awareness program. Tinley Park also has a DARE commission of about 15 volunteers who distribute safety kits and conduct events to fight crime, Trustee Brian Maher has said. "This was not an easy decision to put the officers back on the street," said Maher, chairman of the village board's public safety committee. "But (DARE) is an ongoing expense and commitment. The task for us is going to be how to maintain (DARE) and do it more efficiently and more cost-effectively." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake