Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jul 2000
Source: Deseret News (UT)
Copyright: 2000 Deseret News Publishing Corp.
Contact:  http://www.desnews.com/
Author: Laura Hancock
Note: Laura Hancock may be contacted at  additional articles on DARE are available at 
http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm
Cited: DARE http://www.dare-america.com/

ROCKY SAYS HE'LL INCLUDE SCHOOL BOARD IN DARE OPTIONS

Members Looking At Replacements For Fall Semester

At least everyone agrees on one thing: drug prevention needs to be taught 
to kids in the fifth grade.

And that's about where the agreement stopped Tuesday at the Salt Lake City 
Board of Education meeting.

Despite disagreement — over whether the DARE drug resistance program works, 
what substitute program to use if DARE is scrapped, and whether Salt Lake 
City Mayor Rocky Anderson was making decisions and leaving board members in 
the dark — the mayor and the superintendent told the board and community 
members they will be inclusive in making further decisions about drug and 
life-skills education programs in the schools.

Anderson countered attacks that his disregard for DARE is newly found by 
saying he has been reading studies on DARE success rates for the last three 
years. He also said he has meet with Superintendent Darline Robles eight 
times since January to discuss DARE, including one time when the two met 
with doctors who developed the highly-praised ATLAS program in Portland, Ore.

Robles said the press misreported that the school board was not informed of 
her DARE meetings with Anderson. That is untrue, she says. "That has always 
been shared."

Not all school board members, however, felt they were part of the 
decision-making process in doing away with DARE.

"I felt like the train . . . was going down the track and I couldn't get 
on," said board president Kathy Black.

"I feel like the process that was done by the mayor was unfair," said board 
member Cliff Higbee.

Anderson said there would be no more "surprises" with the DARE decision.

"I just want to make it very, very clear," Anderson said. "My 
administration wants to work and collaborate with the school board."

DARE is just one of many life-skills programs used in Salt Lake schools, 
along with programs like Prevention Dimensions and health curricula.

Higbee said the whole K-12 curriculum may be flawed. "Maybe DARE is not the 
only thing that is not working," Higbee said, adding there might be a need 
for more thorough research.

Robles said that cannot be determined until parents wholeheartedly help 
researchers obtain data from students, by signing permission slips that 
allow questioning of their children.

"I would like us to really focus on getting this information for our 
student body," she said.

One common belief of the several parents and case workers at the meeting 
was that police officers are ineffective in the classroom. Anderson said 
officers are most needed on the street.

"This is not about our budget, it's about putting together a program for 
our children that's going to be most effective," Anderson said.

If DARE is killed in Salt Lake City this fall, educators will have to 
scramble to throw together another program in its place. One ideas 
suggested was to implement Prevention Dimensions for the first semester. By 
the end of the first semester, educators should have a new program 
developed. EveryoneAll wants to use the 17 hours allotted fifth-graders to 
teach some form of drug resistance or life skills.

Board members may need a little more convincing that DARE is as ineffective 
as Anderson says. The mayor claims the program is marketed heavily, despite 
having no results or negative results, in which the rate of students trying 
drugs increases.

"I have a real hard time saying DARE was ineffective," Black said.

However, only one person spoke in favor of DARE. Mike Milne called taking 
an officer out of a classroom "a mistake."

Milne said DARE "teaches the consequences of risky behavior."

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