Pubdate: Mon, 23 Feb 2009 Source: News-Press (Fort Myers, FL) Copyright: 2009 The News-Press Contact: http://www.news-press.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1133 Author: Cristela Guerra Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) LEE COUNTY DEPUTIES REPLACE DARE School Drug-Prevention Program Shorter, But Less Costly When William Carmine of Alva Middle School heard the DARE program was being discontinued, his concern wasn't for himself, but for future students. Active in the program since fifth grade, Carmine, 15, is graduating from Alva Middle in May and going on to Riverdale High School. "DARE influences new kids that come to the school," Carmine said. "Kids need a shoulder to lean on." Three weeks after the Lee County Sheriff's Office eliminated its drug education program in schools because of budget constraints, a briefer - - but what officials hope is just as effective - replacement is on the way. Sheriff's Deputies Teaching Students About Responsible Decisions, or STAR, will be introduced in 19 Lee schools. It replaces DARE, the Drug Abuse Resistance Education Program. "We did not waste any time, with the demise of DARE, to go forward," said Lt. Blake Lee, commander of the sheriff's youth services division. "It made up a large part of our youth safety program, and we were forced to re-evaluate what we have and make do with the (school resource officers) we currently have," Lee said. The well-known DARE program was a casualty of the sheriff's office's need to trim more than $5.5 million from this year's budget. The program ended at 25 schools in unincorporated Lee County. In contrast to the 10-week DARE program, STAR is a one-time, 45-minute session that will be taught by deputies or school resource officers, or SROs, based at the schools. Lee said SROs have been trained in the STAR curriculum, which was created by deputy Kerry Albermethy, a former DARE instructor at the sheriff's office with more than 11 years in law enforcement. "He compiled drug prevention programs from all different areas," Lee said. "So, we expect it to be fairly effective." While STAR will only be available to the 19 county schools with assigned resource officers - compared with 28 schools that offered DARE - Lee hopes the program eventually will be presented in all schools that want it. While he concedes the 45-minute program isn't as comprehensive as DARE, "at the end of the day, it's all the same information," Lee said. "What it comes down to is, is it better to have 45 minutes or no minutes? In the end, it's all about how you present the information to the individual child." The new curriculum will be presented as a PowerPoint and video shown to students followed by a question-and-answer session. School resource officers received training recently and were receptive, Lee said. "When the SRO program began in 1983, the main emphasis was on education, counseling and law enforcement," Lee said. "Due to school violence and other issues, that balance has changed to law enforcement, counseling and education." Deputies will cover topics such as bullying and alcohol, tobacco and drug abuse, with a specific focus on prescription-drug abuse, which has increased among minors. While experts say drug use in general is down among students, it's still a cause for concern. One recent example is the arrest of five students, ages 13 and 14, at Three Oaks Middle School in San Carlos Park on charges of selling and distributing marijuana in the cafeteria. Jean Campbell, coordinator of Safe & Drug-Free Schools with the Lee County district, said despite such episodes, drug use by students has decreased overall. "The kids told us in a survey we did that the most reliable source of information on drug and alcohol education was DARE for middle schoolers," Campbell said. "For high schoolers, it's their parents and then DARE." DARE is still offered to fifth-graders in most elementary schools by Fort Myers and Cape Coral, taught by DARE officers from those respective police departments. But Cape Coral went from three DARE officers to two, also because of recent budget cuts. "There has definitely been decline in the net numbers," said John Lindsay, regional director for DARE America. "But interest has stayed the same with a great number of people attending our DARE officer training workshops." As a result of cutbacks, Lindsay said, various counties try to develop their own imitations with similar curriculums, as Lee is doing. "I'm understanding of the budget challenges that face the county," Lindsay said. "And any effort - anything at all - is better than nothing." Carmine's grandmother, Joan Mycoff, 67, of Fort Myers agrees. "The program gave local kids a place where they can go without retribution and feel safe," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin