Pubdate: Wed, 20 Jan 1999 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 1999 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Website: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Forum: http://www.star-telegram.com/comm/forums/ Contact: Bryon Okada, Star-Telegram Staff Writer GRAPEVINE-COLLEYVILLE DISTRICT IS PROUD OF VITAL SIGNS GRAPEVINE -- Worried that her daughter was experimenting with drugs, a mother was wondering where she could turn for help. She found a lifeline in a packet called Vital Signs for a Healthy Community that gave her a telephone number for Grapevine-Colleyville school district's Instructional Support Center. There, counselor Marilyn Rice directed her to a Drug Abuse Resistance Education officer at her daughter's school. Vital Signs for a Healthy Community is a one-stop information resource created by the Instructional Support Center. The packet, paid for in part with a $500 donation from Baylor Medical Center at Grapevine, represents a decade of accumulated information from a community-school effort to keep students in school and off drugs. "Parents have jobs in Dallas and Fort Worth, and the students are often left to themselves," said Rice, the district's student support services coordinator. "The big city is coming, people are moving in, and they don't have roots, they don't have family support, and that has made it worse." Vital Signs for a Healthy Community, the brainchild of the district's 10-year-old Substance Abuse Prevention Committee, includes statistics on drug and alcohol use, information from anti-drug groups and on future events, tips on family relationships and parenting, and contact telephone numbers, including for the Instructional Support Center. The center, housed in a former pastor's office on Timberline Drive, works to keep children in school. Part of that mission includes fielding calls from parents. As part of the Vital Signs for a Healthy Community effort, the district is mailing a SAFE HOMES directory of almost 1,000 parents who have pledged that if teens attend a party at their house, it will be supervised and won't include alcohol. The directory has been endorsed by the school district, Texans' War On Drugs and police chiefs in Colleyville and Grapevine. "I take it seriously that when children come over to my house, I'll chaperone them," said parent Becky Meadows of Colleyville. "Vigilance is not just related to drugs and alcohol. It's important to know what your kids are doing. I'm interested in them." Vital Signs for a Healthy Community began last year as a single-page newsletter. This year, with its extensive information and multiple inserts, district officials sought the help of students. Some work was done by students in the Peer Assistance and Leadership program, but the bulk of the work on the 3,000 packets was done by about 20 students in the special-needs classes at Grapevine High School. It was then mailed to parents. Students were excited to see how far-reaching their efforts have become. "It was hard work, but I think it got a lot of good information out to a lot of people," said Grapevine High School junior Christina Watkins of Grapevine. Drug and alcohol use among Grapevine-Colleyville district students is slightly higher than the state average at the high school level but lower than the state average at the middle school level. Officials say the good news at the lower level may be because of anti-drug efforts aimed at younger students. Rice said that at the high school level, substance abuse can be tied to lingering apathy about alcohol and so-called recreational drug use. Vital Signs for a Healthy Community may be making a difference. Carroll, Fort Worth, Hurst-Euless-Bedford and Keller school districts requested Vital Signs for a Healthy Community packets to study, said Martha Sayre, Grapevine-Colleyville's student support services assistant. Area medical officials also laud the program's effort to protect the health and welfare of the community. "This is obviously a very proactive and positive approach to dealing with the anti-drug program," said Amy Wetzel, marketing coordinator for Baylor Medical Center at Grapevine. For program information, call Student Support Services at 251-5521. Send your comments to --- MAP posted-by: derek rea