Pubdate: 12 Jan 2011 Source: Times, The (Fairfax County, VA) Contact: http://www.fairfaxtimes.com/submissions/editor.php Copyright: 2011 Times Community Newspapers Website: http://www.fairfaxtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4354 Author: DeForest Rathbone FAIRFAX COUNTY YOUTH SURVEY DELIVERS BAD NEWS FOR PARENTS The new 2009 Fairfax County Youth Survey released in late October revealed a serious increase in teen marijuana use from the baseline low rates reported in the 2005 survey. Overall "recent-use" (past 30-day) rates for all students rose from 9.2 percent in 2005 to 11.6 percent in 2009, meaning a 26 percent increase. Especially alarming was the rate for boys, which increased 36 percent. Page 54 of the survey reads, "Usage ... increased from 2005 to 2009, for all grades, genders and race/ethnicities." This increase is consistent with national teen marijuana use trends. Experts say it is mainly attributable to two primary influences: Massive publicity about "medical marijuana" initiatives, which persuade teens that marijuana must be harmless if it's OK for medicine, and the proliferation of high-tech cell phones among students, giving local pushers direct access to students in the market for drugs and alcohol. However, some good news confirmed in the survey is that about half of all students have never used alcohol or drugs, thus increasing their chances of leading healthy and successful lives. Unfortunately, the vast majority of parents believe their own child to be among the non-users and thus have little interest in school drug-prevention activities. Although the survey shows that all students are endangered by drug- and alcohol-related destructive behaviors, relatively few parents ever attend school drug-prevention assemblies. Most believe the problem just doesn't apply to them -- although some learn otherwise, often too late. Under minimum inhibition from toothless juvenile crime rules, many of the drug-using and drug-pushing students work overtime trying to entice their non-using schoolmates to get involved. This uncontrolled and undetected influence has been compared to the spread of contagious diseases, which the disease of addiction essentially is. It is the main reason teen drug use increases once a student has started doing it, as affirmed on page 55 of the survey: "Reported use of marijuana increases dramatically with age." Drug education by itself has proven more than four decades of use to be insufficient to protect the most-at-risk kids from the school drug pushers and from destructive behaviors such as those identified in the surveys. Drug education is essential, but it must be reinforced with additional action in order to effectively reach all students and leave no student behind on drugs. To accomplish this goal and virtually eliminate student drug use, thousands of schools throughout the nation today utilize health screening of kids for exposure to drugs by use of non-punitive Random Student Drug Testing (RSDT). This is the strong recommendation of former U.S. Drug Czar John Walters as presented in his TV interview about the massive 2008 Fairfax County heroin bust and drug overdose death tragedy that claimed so many teen lives. Therefore, in order to help fulfill their joint responsibility to protect the health and safety of Fairfax County schoolchildren, both the Board of Supervisors and the School Board should soon authorize an official inquiry into the possible use of RSDT in Fairfax County schools as a means to reverse the current tragic trends identified in recent Youth Surveys. DeForest Rathbone, chairman, National Institute of Citizen Anti-Drug Policy, Great Falls - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom