Pubdate: Sat, 29 Aug 2009 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2009 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Note: The Journal does not publish LTEs from writers outside its circulation area Author: Paul Garber DANGERS OF DRUGS TO BE TAUGHT Gathering at Dash Field Paid for With Seized Drug Money Today, more than 500 parents and children will take part in activities at Wake Forest Baseball Park to help youngsters learn about the dangers of drug and alcohol abuse. They will also be given free Winston-Salem Dash hats and T-shirts for taking a short quiz about those risks. And it is being paid for by the very people who peddle those illegal drugs. The Parent Kid Challenge is the latest activity sponsored by a partnership between the Winston-Salem Police Department, the Dash baseball team, and Drug Free North Carolina, an anti-drug advocacy group. So far this year, more than 1,000 children have taken part in the program, which is being paid for with $30,000 in drug forfeiture money, Police Chief Scott Cunningham said. The money pays for tickets to the game, Dash hats and T-shirts, and food during the game for at-risk youths, he said. "We're using money seized from drug dealers to do something positive," Cunningham said. "I think it's a great use of the money." Cunningham said that the at-risk youths were identified through community groups that the police work with, such as the Salvation Army Boys & Girls Clubs and the YMCA. The Parent Kid Challenge will run from 10 a.m. to noon and will include baseball drills and a chance for the youngsters to meet the ballplayers. But you don't have to be enrolled in the program to benefit. The Dash will play the Lynchburg Hillcats at 7 p.m. Anyone who takes the 10-item quiz at the game will be given a Dash hat and T-shirt regardless of how well they answer the questions. The idea for the program started last year, when Robin Lindner of Drug Free North Carolina approached the police department and the Dash about working together to get the message out about the dangers of drugs. Lindner said that a baseball game provided an ideal family setting for children and their families to have a conversation about drugs. "It's motherhood and apple pie," she said. "A ballpark is one of the most affordable ways for families to do things together." Lindner said that children are 50 percent less likely to use drugs when their parents take the time to talk to them about the risks. But only about a third of parents typically do so, Lindner said. "If you can get them through their teen years without doing drugs, they are likely to never try them as an adult," she said. Dash President Kevin Terry said he thought about waiting until the new park was opened but decided that the program was too important to put on hold. "It wasn't about the ballpark, it was about the message," Terry said "We feel we've made an impact." The new ballpark should be ready by April, he said, and he wants the program to continue there. Cunningham said that the program is unique to Winston-Salem, and that he would like to see other communities adopt it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake