Pubdate: Wed, 22 Jul 2009 Source: Rockford Register Star (IL) Copyright: 2009 GateHouse Media, Inc. Contact: http://www.rrstar.com/contact Website: http://www.rrstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/370 Author: Kevin Haas, Staff Writer LOVES PARK POLICE CANCEL DARE PROGRAM LOVES PARK — Budget constraints will cost the Loves Park Police Department its DARE program. The department will not continue its Drug Abuse Resistance Education program in schools this fall. The program brings an officer into the classroom to help students learn how to deal with the pressures associated with drugs and violence. “It’s not because of the program itself,” Loves Park Police Chief Pat Carrigan said. “We believe in it, we think it’s important, we just don’t have the luxury to right now to be able to assign an individual to be able to handle that any longer.” Officials have explored ways to reduce costs as sales-tax revenues, the greatest single source of income for the city, have dropped over the past year. “If things would have been better (economic times) we wouldn’t even have been talking about this now,” Mayor Darryl Lindberg said. “But we have to be good stewards of the money and this is the right thing to do.” The department’s DARE officer, Randy Jones, will be transferred to a vacant position on patrol. Jones had been the city’s DARE officer since 1998, Carrigan said. He taught the DARE course in Loves Park Elementary, Maple Elementary, Rock Cut Elementary, Windsor Elementary, and St. Bridget’s Catholic School, Lindberg said. The city’s Civil Service Commission had conducted interviews in June to fill an open patrol spot, but there will no longer be an outside hire for that position, Carrigan said. “I think it is more important right now to make sure our patrol staff is up to strength,” Lindberg said. The cut could save the city around $75,000, Lindberg said. A starting officer makes $42,769 this year, not including benefits. Dropping DARE programs isn’t unfamiliar to police departments around the Rock River Valley. For example, the Belvidere Police Department was forced to eliminate its DARE program in 2004 after serving children since 1988. Police Chief Jan Noble said the need for officers to respond to the growing influx of calls for service outweighed the need for the program. He noted that the department stepped up its community policing and outreach programs during the same time with the help of grant money. Roscoe police Chief Jamie Evans, who has served as a DARE officer, said the department’s DARE program took a one-year hiatus in 2007 but was revived with financial assistance from the village, Kinnikinnick School District and donations. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr