Pubdate: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 Source: News-Times, The (Danbury, CT) Copyright: 2010 The News-Times Contact: http://www.newstimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/637 Author: Eileen FitzGerald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) POPULAR DRUG PROGRAM ENDS IN DANBURY, ELSEWHERE DANBURY -- The iconic program that has taught and encouraged schoolchildren to avoid drugs and make wiser decisions in life has become a victim of the tough economy. Beginning this month, the Danbury Police Department no longer is offering the D.A.R.E. program -- Drug Abuse Resistance Education -- in the city's public and private schools. New Milford canceled the drug-prevention program as of September citing budget woes, but it continues in Bethel because of the school community's fundraising efforts. Brookfield canceled D.A.R.E. in 1992, also a casualty of finances. On Tuesday, the fourth- and fifth-graders at Maimonides Academy in Danbury graduted from the D.A.R.E. program as Mayor Mark Boughton and Police Chief Al Baker watched. "Certainly, to be able to reach children at this young age and educate them makes it such a valuable program," Maimonides Principal Jodi Edelstein said. "It gives them alternative ways to defuse situations. I am a D.A.R.E. fan." D.A.R.E. was founded in 1983 in Los Angeles by then-Police Chief Darryl Gates and is now taught in 43 countries. It's a police officer-led series of classroom lessons to teach children to resist peer pressure and live without drugs and violence. Danbury schools had D.A.R.E. classes for about two decades. "As of the end of the first semester, the police department said it would no longer teach D.A.R.E. in the Danbury schools," Capt. Thomas Wendel, spokesman for the department, said Tuesday. "Financial issues were the main reason, along with lack of staff and lack of D.A.R.E.-trained staff." D.A.R.E. Officer Brian Hayes, who taught the classes in public and parochial schools in the city, was reassigned as school resource officer at Broadview Middle School to replace the late Robert DiNardo. New Milford ended its D.A.R.E. program at the start of school in the fall. It was run by an officer assigned to Sarah Noble Intermediate School, according to New Milford Police Department spokesman Capt. Michael Mrazik. The town started the program in the mid-1990s under Chief James Sweeney, and Mrazik said some members of the Town Council would like to find another program along the same lines. "Our D.A.R.E. officer was reassigned to regular patrol duties," Mrazik said. "It was financial. Whether it comes back in any shape or form, I don't know." Bethel D.A.R.E. Officer Ralph DeLuca has led his town's program since 1989 and now teaches the children of students he once taught in class. He holds the class during his shift, but helps raise money to support the program on his own time. "The connection with the community is invaluable," he said. "I consider the 'D' is for decision making, because if you make a good decision you don't want to get involved in drugs and violence. "The problem with prevention," DeLuca added, "is you don't know what you prevented. It's immeasurable. I have anecdotal evidence from parents that their kid made a good decision based on what they heard in D.A.R.E." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake