Pubdate: Fri, 09 Oct 2009 Source: Airdrie City View (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Airdrie City View Ltd. Contact: http://airdriecityview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3202 Author: Stacie Snow Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) COMMUNITY RESOURCE OFFICERS CONNECTING WITH STUDENTS Airdrie's new community resource officers will help students of all ages become more comfortable with police officers. Constables Robert Frizzell and Patti Reid, who started Sept. 1, will work with all of the schools in Airdrie. Frizzell will present the DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program to younger students and Reid will work with students in middle and high schools. "We are working one success at a time," said Reid. "Through relationship development, we can provide assistance to families in crisis, kids who are being bullied and resolve any safety concerns in the schools, while diminishing elicit drug activity." The vision of the community resource unit is to build bridges between youth at risk and police by providing early intervention and positive interaction. The members will work with community partners and agencies to address illicit drug use, violence, bullying and criminal behaviour by youth. Reid said it takes five healthy adults to raise a child. "If home life isn't so good, we need to make sure the child is connecting with teachers, aunts, older siblings, police or social services," said Reid. "This will help them realize that there are positive or negative consequences for their actions but we can work through this. It takes a community to raise a child and we should get back to that." Reid has spoken to the students in Bert Church, George McDougall and St. Martin de Porres high schools and so far, her presence has been well received. "It is a positive, proactive force in our school," said George McDougall principal Mark Davidson. "This is opening the lines of communication with the RCMP. Now when kids see something in the community that they know is wrong, they have a contact that they know and trust." The program serves the rest of the community by making streets and neighbourhoods safer, he added. Bernard Downey, principal of St. Martin de Porres High School, said he wants to make it clear that Reid's job is not just about talking to the "bad" kids. "It is about sending a proactive message and teaching children how to avoid going down negative roads," he said. Nancy Adams, principal of Bert Church High School, said she is very much looking forward to having Reid in the school. "It will be a huge benefit because kids will no longer think of police officers as bad people," she said. "They can see (Reid) as a support rather than someone to be afraid of." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom