Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 1999 Source: Herald, The (New Britain, CT) Copyright: 1999, The Herald Contact: http://www.ctcentral.com/cgi-bin/w3com/start?ctcentral+TheHerald Forum: http://www.ctcentral.com/cgi-bin/w3com/pws/ctcentral/ Author: Tara Stapleton POLICE WARN: KIDS KNOW DRUGS ARE EVERYWHERE Editor's note: Herald reporter Tara Stapleton is writing about her experiences in Southington's Citizens Police Academy. SOUTHINGTON -- Bongs, crack pipes and coke lines. These bits were enough to bring some life to the seventh week of the Southington Citizen's Police Academy Wednesday. A quaint class of about six remain for the voluntary law enforcement class offered annually for area residents and this year, me. Although more than half of the few of us left in the class are a group of mere 20-somethings, drug issues concerning children in town were enough for us to find ourselves huffing "kids today," under our breath. Officers Bernard Zawisza and Karen Apicella, both D.A.R.E officers, displayed some features from a collection of bongs, pipes and other paraphernalia that has accumulated in the department over time. Another display case next to that paraphernalia held needles, spoons, cocaine lines on glass, a pacifier (sometimes used as an inconspicuous tool for taking drugs) and other various deceptive drug tools. "If only they used their brains in school like they do when they build these things," Apicella said as we surveyed some inventive and resourceful homemade paraphernalia. And while part of a parent's means for identifying a drug problem with their child involves being competent in identifying some of these clever tools, Zawisza and Apicella explained that problems between parents and their children in town are an even further cry from healthy than area residents might think. Apicella recalled a recent incident where a teenage boy was arrested for possession of marijuana and paraphernalia. But hopes of inviting a mother, livid from her son's actions, down to police headquarters, were dashed when in stormed a mother irate at police officers. "You have no right to arrest my son! He was just smoking pot!" yelled the mother. The woman apparently even went as far as to suggest that the police return the "pot" which was unfairly confiscated from her son. "It gets discouraging sometimes," Apicella said of the encounters she comes by. In her third year as a D.A.R.E educator, she claims it was the D.A.R.E program that enticed her into police work. And despite those discouraging times, Apicella said, pun intended, "Working with kids is a high." Zawisza and Apicella both told of the willingness kids have to open up about the fact that drugs are readily available to them, but they both explained that the details stop when it comes to giving out names due to the fear they have of getting into trouble with those whose identities they reveal. In a poll that Apicella said she recently took from 100 students (fifth and sixth graders), she said one third admitted to cigarette smoking, slightly more admitted to trying some sort of drugs and somewhere over 60 percent admitted to consuming alcohol on a regular basis. Substantiating her claims in the lack of discipline that parents have and how purposeful discipline can be, Apicella said about 12 of the 100 kids said their parents would do nothing if they caught them being involved in some sort of drug or alcohol use. And Apicella said that those 12 kids were also the ones who admitted to doing basically all of the drugs mentioned in the poll. "Parents are afraid that if they discipline their kids that the kids are going to alienate them," Apicella said. Talk of the leniency parents give to their children today, triggered the class to rehash and share memories of moms and dads flipping out over trivial things and how we were all fearful of the dreaded mom and her wooden spoon..f course those days were not long ago. In a time where 90 percent of crime is somehow drug-related, according to D.A.R.E statistics, Apicella stands by the much criticized D.A.R.E program she is involved with. So the question arose yet again, posing that all too familiar cry of "Where are the parents?" When drug programs by the Drug Task Force or the D.A.R.E officers creates a forum opportunity for the entire town of 38,000, Apicella said, referring to a program she was involved with Tuesday night, "nobody shows up." So when people stab at the D.A.R.E program, she said "That comment aggravates me." - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry