Pubdate: Tue, 23 Aug 2011 Source: Vail Daily (CO) Copyright: 2011 Vail Daily Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wo3Ts7AI Website: http://www.vaildaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3233 Author: Randy Wyrick, Staff Writer EAGLE VALLEY LAUNCHES DRUG, ALCOHOL ABUSE PROGRAM Students Can Help Themselves, Each Other, in Getting Treatment GYPSUM, Colorado -- Schools are on the front lines of the war on drugs and that makes it worth fighting, says an Eagle Valley High School administrator. "Is it a war worth fighting? "I say yes. Absolutely yes," said Eric Mandeville, assistant principal at Eagle Valley High School. As part of that fight, Eagle Valley High School put together a Student Assistance Program designed to help kids dealing with drug and alcohol abuse, and other problems. It's part counseling and part police -- more the former than the latter. It also provides anonymity for students who want to get help for their classmates. Safe to Tell Safe to Tell is a new peer-referral process. Kids remain anonymous if they point out someone they think is abusing drugs and alcohol. "It takes little bit of moxie to step up and call it what it is," said Mike Gass, the school district's executive director of student services. Kids caught at school under the influence of alcohol or drugs face suspension, but more importantly they get counseling and they start working through an expulsion prevention plan. They're interviewed, tested, and their parents get involved. Usually, parents are where the problems begin, says Sara Cross, outreach and prevention coordinator at Eagle Valley. "When students abuse or use drugs and alcohol, most have parents who do the same thing," Cross said. Support groups are available for students whose parents abuse alcohol and drugs. Eagle Valley will join Battle Mountain in doing random drug testing for students involved in extra curricular activities, Mandeville said. Changing times It's all part of the times in which we live, Gass says. "It's a big challenge in our country. Times are tough and we're dealing with challenges all across the country," Gass said. "We have more kids abandoned, kids living in campgrounds. More kids are living on their own." Preschool kids are occasionally abandoned on a school's doorstep. "Families sometimes drop their kids at school and head to Mexico, expecting us to take care of those kids," Gass said. About a day and a half of his week is now taken up with social services departments. Then there's society under the influence of medical marijuana. "We see tons of medical marijuana and people are reselling it to our kids. People who are old enough to have a card, 18, are bringing it into the schools," Gass said. "What used to be recreational has now become something of the norm in some groups of kids." Gass says he has picked up abandoned coats with marijuana and other drugs in the pockets, or things dropped out of cars. Walk the parking lot after an event and what used to be litter can be paraphernalia, or a baggie with drug residue in it, he said. One of every 10 calls he gets is a community member saying he saw someone from one of the schools doing "this or that." "I get those calls more than I ever did. Our community is concerned about it," Gass said. Your on-the-street drug dealer is changing and so is the dope they're selling, Mandeville said. In a Vail Daily ad, a local medical marijuana business boasts 24 percent THC in one of their strains. "Not so long ago, that was one-third of that," Mandeville. Caffeine is the most abused drug among teens, Mandeville said. A 16-ounce Monster drink contains one-third more caffeine than of coffee. Kids become jittery, impulsive and disruptive. They get headaches and cannot pay attention or sit still, Mandeville said. "Things are changing. More and more these days we are the parents to some of these kids," Mandeville said. "We teach them to read, to write, how to act." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.