Pubdate: 16 Dec 1998 Source: Boulder Daily Camera (CO) Contact: http://www.bouldernews.com/ Copyright: 1998 The Daily Camera. Author: Associated Press DARE STILL FINDS SUPPORT WITH PUEBLO-AREA PRINCIPALS PUEBLO-- While some cities and districts are dropping the controversial DARE program, principals in at least one corner of Colorado say they plan to stick with the youth drug-prevention program. DARE, or Drug Awareness Resistance Education, brings law enforcement officers into fifth- and sixth-grade classrooms to teach children about the dangers of substance abuse. The program has been criticized by some because it exposes to kids to drugs by way of discussion. Others say there is no hard-and-fast data to prove that it works. The costly program has been scrapped or broadly modified by the Boulder police and sheriff's department and the police department in Louisville, also in Boulder County. But Pueblo-area school principals responding to an informal survey last week said they favor DARE. Most said they believe the positive exposure to police is at least as important as the subject matter. "The program provides the students with refusal skills," said Kent Burger, principal at Sunset Elementary. "I'd rather they hear about the harm drugs cause in an educational setting then on the streets," Burger said. Belmont Elementary principal Jose Duarte said he is "happy with DARE" because it students get to know the enforcement officer involved and "see that he's a person, too." "They also find out about drugs and alcohol in a positive, proactive way," Duarte said. "Yes, it's a parent's job to tell the kid, but not all parents do." At Vineland Elementary, principal Elizabeth Trujillo praised the sheriff's deputy who presents the program. She said that while she has not seem statistics on whether DARE works, she thinks it helps her students. "Peer pressure is awful tough on a kid," Trujillo said. "DARE teaches the kids what can happen and introduces them to the subject in a constructive way." The officers generally work for about an hour a week with a class, which lasts one semester and ends with a graduation ceremony. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski