Pubdate: Tue, 01 Sep 2009 Source: Today's Sunbeam (NJ) Copyright: 2009 Today's Sunbeam Contact: http://www.nj.com/sunbeam/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4423 Author: Randall Clark, Staff Writer SALEM CITY POLICE SHOW THEY MEAN BUSINESS IN KEEPING YOUTHS AWAY FROM DRUGS SALEM -- In a tug-of-war for the future of the city's youth, police took a hard pull on Tuesday, setting up half a dozen road signs to let everyone know illicit substances are not welcome here. At every main city entrance and in front of every school, officials and authorities erected D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) placards as more than just a warning, but to help children remember to make the choice for a drug-free lifestyle. Surrounding the well-recognized D.A.R.E. logo, with its red letters sketched across a black background, comes a simple message that reads "This is a drug free school zone." Salem City Police Ptl. John Colon, the municipality's D.A.R.E. instructor, said that young people here are constantly battling peer pressure, explaining the police and schools will always be there to provide that counterbalance. "Our job is to give the kids some resources and reach them," Colon said. "These signs are supposed to promote our DARE program ... (and) show the community we are part of it." A police-led program celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, from its humble beginnings in Los Angeles, Calif., D.A.R.E. has spread to 75 percent of the nation's school districts, according to the group's Web site. In Salem it has grown from merely a fifth-grade course to a class being taught from pre-kindergarten through fifth now, Colon said. According to Colon, the program started in 1997 with around 80 children, and this year will be reaching about 400. The six signs were purchased by the Salem City Municipal Alliance and the Salem City Police Department, Colon said, and affixed next to the roadways Tuesday morning. What they are standing up against is a national trend of substance abuse, according to D.A.R.E. statistics, which illustrates that 47 percent of teens will have tried an illicit substance by the end of high school and 72 percent will have consumed alcohol by that time. Though according to Colon, there are also issues with bullying and a disconnect between some kids and the police that D.A.R.E. is attempting to work out. "D.A.R.E. has given us more of an opportunity to come in contact with the kids, and build these relationships," Colon said. With Tuesday's effort, it provides another sign that Salem Police care. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr