Pubdate: 15 Aug 1997 Source: Wenatchee World newspaper Wenatchee, WA Contact: Note: This article was originally published in: BELLINGHAM HERALD, BELLINGHAM WA FAX: 12066767113 Pubdate: Unknown Other Voices column The Bellingham Herald On schools and drugs A proposal to require schools that recieve federal drugprevention funds to prove their antidrug programs work deserves the full support of Congress. The government spends $500 million a year on such programs, but only 2 percent of them follow strategies proven in research, a recent study showed. That ought to alarm lawmakers, parents, police, school officials and taypayers. With youth drug use on the rise nationally, we need to be equipping our children with the mosteffective antidrug tools available. The proposed Education Department guidelines would do that by requiring drug prevention programs to be based "on research or evaluation that provides evidence" they actually have reduced drug use. The programs also would be required to meet measurable goals and objectives. Congress should also be encouraging the Education Department to blacklist ineffective programs. Requiring schools to prove their antidrug programs work is reasonable and longoverdue. Anything less wastes money and endangers our children.