Pubdate: Fri, 08 Aug 2008 Source: Jersey Journal, The (NJ) Copyright: 2008 The Jersey Journal Contact: http://www.nj.com/jjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2699 Author: Jonathan Shapiro Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) POLICE CHIEF: D.A.R.E. IS DONE FOR Parents Gripe, But Money And Manpower Is Lacking The popular D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program has been eliminated from the Bayonne school district for the upcoming school year, Bayonne Police Chief Robert Kubert said yesterday. Elimination of the entire Cops in Schools program is a result of budget cuts and a shortage of police manpower, and was made after weeks of meetings between various city officials. "I told everyone from the city that with the current budgetary constraints and the hiring freeze at City Hall, the program was the first nonessential program that had to go," Kubert said. Last month, Kubert said the force is now 42 below its maximum strength of 250 as permitted by city ordinance. Parents are upset and there is a movement to have the program reinstated, even if it's a scaled-back version. Bayonne resident Gerri Necklan, who has three kids, expressed frustration over the program's demise. "It bothers me a lot," Necklan said. "We've had this program since 1991, and the kids are going to miss the relationships with the police. It really is something that should stay in the schools." Nick Demauro, chairman and CEO of D.A.R.E. NJ, says that he's heard from 10 Bayonne parents, all of whom expressed anger over the program's elimination. "Bayonne has been one of the most successful DARE programs in the state," Demauro said. "It has touched a lot of kids and parents in the community. We are upset about this." Demauro said the state organization is pursuing funding to allow Bayonne to reinstate the program. Board of Education President Will Lawson said he's not happy about losing the program, but knew it was possible. "It's definitely something we'd like to keep, but really, there isn't much we could do," he said. "It's a police decision, not a board of ed issue." City Councilman Anthony Chiappone says he is working on a "scaled-down version" of the D.A.R.E. program, although Kubert believes that such ideas "don't make much sense because of the intensive nature of the curriculum." Currently, a City Council resolution calls for the allocation of $63,526 to the Board of Education for "alcohol and drug abuse programs" that would start Jan. 1. A vote on the resolution is expected at the Aug. 20 meeting. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin