Pubdate: Mon, 29 Sep 2008 Source: Red Deer Advocate (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 Red Deer Advocate Contact: http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2492 Author: Stacy O'Brien Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) SCHOOL POLICING PROGRAM CHANGES A Red Deer mother is concerned her youngest daughter won't have the chance to take the DARE program. Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) teaches Grade 5 students how to resist peer pressure and drugs, alcohol and tobacco. Lise Bettac's two older children, Sean and Julie, learned a lot from the program in past years. "They would come home and talk about it at supper and it's an avenue for communication," Bettac said. "They taught us." She recently found out the program won't be running this year - meaning her daughter Katrina won't have a chance to take it. "I am so disappointed," Bettac said. "I just can't understand it. Out of the blue they do that with no notification to anyone. No asking for opinions about it." The DARE program started in 1999 in Red Deer. Each year, 1,100 to 1,200 Grade 5 students in Red Deer Public and Catholic schools take part. Funded by the Piper Creek Optimists, the program was delivered by two elementary school resource officers from Red Deer City RCMP. City RCMP spokeswoman Cpl. Kathe DeHeer said because DARE was a 10-week program, it ate up all of the time elementary school officers had and they missed the opportunity to interact with all of the grades. DeHeer said it meant the 1,012 Grade 5 students interacted with local police for those sessions, but the other 6,000 or so elementary students didn't. She said because DARE doesn't allow any changes to be made to the program, they couldn't change the number of sessions so that officers could spend more time with the other grades and still offer DARE. "We're looking at new programming that allows us to interact with more children of all grades and not put all our efforts on Grade 5," DeHeer said. "We've been exploring how best to deliver programming for children from kindergarten to Grade 12. I think everybody is going to be extremely happy with what we're doing." Red Deer City RCMP, public and Catholic school officials will meet today to discuss the changes. More details about the new program will be released next week. Red Deer Catholic Regional School Division representatives weren't immediately available for comment. Bruce Buruma, director of community relations with Red Deer Public Schools, said the decision to discontinue the DARE program was a joint decision by the school districts and the RCMP. He said they will look at the officers doing a variety of presentations in the schools. It could mean the officers taking part in a science class and talking about physics and how they determine how a crash has taken place or going to a writing class and explaining the technical writing they do, Buruma said. "We feel we're on a much better track with this. The school officer programs are still there. They have a very important role. We have amazing people doing those roles and doing very important work in the schools," Buruma said. He said Red Deer Public has a district action plan for substance abuse and recognizes that prevention and education takes place across the entire curriculum and at all grade levels. He said DARE isn't the only program they use. He pointed to a partnership with the Red Deer College nursing program where people come into talk to students about tobacco. He said there are also lessons linked with health programs using AADAC materials. "We're replacing DARE with what we feel is far better programming, far better connections for students, for the RCMP," Buruma said. He said the new program will allow all of the elementary students to become better connected to their school resource officers. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin