Pubdate: Thu, 05 Mar 2009 Source: Brooks Bulletin, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 The Brooks Bulletin. Contact: http://www.brooksbulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2917 Author: Bruce Parker STUDENTS GIVEN STRAIGHT TALK ON ALCOHOL, DRUGS A no holds barred Smart Youth Power Assembly presentation on the perils of drinking and driving and substance abuse took place at St. Joseph's Collegiate Thursday morning. Students, police and ambulance personnel listened to former paramedic Norbert Georget describe what can happen when an individual chooses to drink and drive or use drugs. Nothing was left to the imagination for students through the use of video. Students were told how Georget visited a prison to see a student who had been convicted of killing a former student at his school in a drinking and driving accident. The student had asked to see him after learning he was making presentations on drinking and driving that included him. The 17-year-old admitted he deserved to be in jail for what he had done and said he wished it had been him who was killed. In another case, a young teenage boy and his girlfriend were at a party. He was drinking while she was not and the girlfriend had the car keys. The boyfriend wanted the keys back and she finally relented. The two jumped into the car, he ended up crossing the center line going around a curve and an accident followed in which the girlfriend was killed. Georget showed a picture of what a vehicle looks like when it collides with another doing 120km. Students were then startled when a loud bang echoed through the gymnasium to indicate what it sounded like when two vehicles collide at a high rate of speed. The House of Commons justice committee is currently considering lowering the blood alcohol level for the criminal code to .05. The theme then shifted to showing a video on what happens to an individual who chooses to use drugs like crystal meth. Most of the drug users in the video could not stand still. One individual had lost her teeth through using drugs, another young female lost a promising future and a male who was trying to get off crystal meth committed suicide. "I was 15 years old and I was a happy kid. I loved my life. I had all the potential in the world, huge dreams and a million goals. But I made a decision to try crystal meth and it took everything away from me. I lost it all." Another drug user said people who try crystal meth will go crazy first and then die. Gorget concluded his presentation by asking a student to come up and examine a body bag. Georget travels the country throughout the year doing an average of 150 presentations. The Saskatoon resident said the traveling is the hardest part. "The speaking is what keeps me going because once I am in front of a crowd, most of the students are very receptive like they were today. Sometimes you get some tough crowds but that is what I am there for, to make a difference with them." A lot of the information presented to students comes from police departments and ambulance personnel. Georget is handed pictures of accident scenes by police throughout the country but a lot of the stories are from the kids. "They are the ones who designed the whole presentation. They literally designed it to show more pictures and get rid of statistics." One student suggested he bring a body bag with him for presentations and he decided to do it. "I started listening to students and I became a lot more successful by listening to them." Georget has been making presentations for 26 years. Some people have asked him when he thinks he might retire. "The day I don't believe what I am talking about is the day I quit because it is not fair to me and them. They will be able to tell that I don't have the passion behind it anymore and I still have the passion." Georget became involved in making presentations at the suggestion of another paramedic. He said he was a complainer and complained about having to go to another shooting, drunk driving call and other calls. One day his partner suggested he do something about it so he went to his home town and spoke to former students he knew there. "What turned into a hobby doing these for four years turned into a full-time thing. This is my 22nd year full-time." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin