Pubdate: Wed, 04 Feb 2009 Source: Honolulu Advertiser (HI) Copyright: 2009 The Honolulu Advertiser Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/uXtrz8Lm Website: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/195 Author: Anne E. O'Malley ANTI-DRUG COORDINATOR AIMS TO SAVE LIVES Theresa Koki And Volunteers Carry Out Plan Some 80 to 90 percent of all crimes committed on Kaua'i are drug related. This is according to a Drug Response Plan covering 2008-2013 and generated to serve as a guide for agencies who work with youth and adults, especially those struggling with substance abuse. And who knows those statistics better than mayoral appointee, Anti-Drug Coordinator Theresa Koki? Stepping into her third year as what some jokingly call her anti-drug "Czarina" position, Koki's office faces the same economic gloom as the rest of the nation. And the good news? Koki and her cadre of about 100 volunteers, plus a new Americorps volunteer worker carry on. Good thing Koki is a glass half-full kind of person, because witnessing drug addiction or abuse is stressful, and she deals with it every day. "It affects almost every family," says Koki. "It's such an ugly addiction and turns normal people into different people, ruins families and communities. I actually had a hard time keeping staff here because of what it takes to take care of it and at least try to fight it." The Drug Response Plan addresses four interconnected components of the problem identified and addressed in the first response plan initiated during the late Mayor Bryan J. Baptiste's administration: prevention, treatment, integration and enforcement. In the process of working these four elements, Koki forms community partnerships, working with nonprofit community organizations to help get funding to continue what's working while managing grants and working with school students. Her work is all across the board. Ideally, having a healthy budget for prevention would help nip some of the drug - and alcohol - abuse and addiction in the bud. "If you do prevention up front, you don't have to do as much on the other end," says Koki. An example of prevention programming is Waele A Ola Hou, meaning, literally, to take out and replenish. It's based on a federal program that goes by the name "Weed and Seed," meaning just what it says - rip out the unwanted stuff and plant anew. But Kaua'i didn't meet population requirements for the federal funding, so Koki's office got it elsewhere and had Waele A Ola Hou going in three communities - Kekaha, Hanama'ulu and Kilauea. Hanama'ulu worked with the Parks and Recreation Department to remove illegal campers, spruce the place up and have a celebration to let families know they're welcome and all can work to keep it safe. It's community-building and some take issue with spending money that way, but building community is what prevention is all about, Koki said. Communities have held neighborhood walks to take back the streets, so to speak, met, mingled and gotten healthy in the process. Koki points to her office's involvement in partnering with the Big Brothers Big Sisters program, three of which are going on between Kapa'a Elementary and High School. And Koki and at least 10 other county employees are sistering and brothering with kids at Wilcox Elementary - they call each other lunch buddies. "The fact that they have someone coming over to talk to them is exciting," she says. "It's actually a stress release for me to go over and talk with them." One of the most dramatic prevention programs is called Shattered Dreams, a mock drunk driver crash a year in the planning and enacted over two days at a different public high school each year. Students in the enactment play various roles; all go away overnight for a retreat, some of them tapped by the Grim Reaper. "I cannot do one without crying," says Koki. Treatment is a vital part of the Drug Response Plan. The notion of sending youth off to another island doesn't sit well with people who are in the business of knowing what works. "We send our kids off island and their families are here and the family falls apart," says Koki. "We need to heal together. "The community needs to be educated. If we're saying yes, we need a treatment center, but don't put in my backyard, they need to understand it IS already in their backyard - people are using." Welcoming former users back into the community - integration - and enforcement are the remaining key elements to the Drug Response Plan. Says Koki, "If I can save one life every day, I think I've done my job. You don't hear about it right away, but I've known a lot of success stories, and if that person can help another person then it's a chain reaction." To download the Drug Response Plan, go to www.kauai.gov/antidrug ; for more information or to volunteer, contact Koki at or 241.4925. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin