Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jan 2002 Source: Pueblo Chieftain (CO) Copyright: 2002 The Star-Journal Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.chieftain.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1613 Author: Juan Espinosa Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) DARE OFFERS HOPE AGAINST DRUGS Attorney General Ken Salazar told members of the Colorado DARE Association Friday that they represent the nation's most promising hope in the battle against drugs in our schools and he is their biggest cheerleader. Salazar promised he would work tirelessly to help make the Colorado DARE (Drug Awareness Resistance Education) program the best in the country and called for the state's citizens to join him in his support for DARE - a program that he said teaches kids to resist drugs and violence. "We have a drug problem in our schools," Salazar said. "Drugs know no boundaries. Every school has drug problems." Salazar said he recently spoke to a group of 200 students in a small rural high school and that easily half of them "reeked" of marijuana. He acknowledged that with the emphasis on CSAP tests and increased academic performance, DARE programs have new competition for a place in school curriculum, but cautioned that it is not an either/or situation. "Unless we deal with the fundamental issues of drug-free schools, we will not achieve the academic excellence we want for our kids," Salazar said. Salazar's comments were made at the awards dinner of the 12th Annual Conference of the Colorado Association of DARE Officers held at the Pueblo Convention Center. The dinner was a high point of a four-day training conference that will wrap up today. The attorney general's office handles 10,000 legal cases a year and is tenacious on enforcing the state's laws, Salazar said. But the flip side to prosecution and law enforcement is prevention, he added. "We need to embrace the prevention side of law enforcement," he said in his strong endorsement of DARE. He acknowledged that the program has its critics and detractors, but encouraged the state's 500 police and sheriff DARE officers to stand firm. "There also have been lots of successes," Salazar said. "Nothing is perfect. It's the people in the trenches who are in the best position to move on the drug-free schools agenda." In addition to the drug-abuse prevention, DARE also is valuable in building relationships between the youth of the community and uniformed officers. Before he spoke, participants at the dinner were entertained by the Danzantes de Pueblo - Corazon y Alma - a Pueblo folkloric dance group. After their performance, announcer Jose Esteban Ortega introduced the dancers and said all but the ones who have not yet attended fifth grade were DARE graduates. Pueblo Police Chief Jim Billings said the DARE convention was in Pueblo this year due primarily to the efforts of Cpl. Tim Pepin, a veteran DARE officer who retired from the department in December. Pepin could not attend the conference, however, because he suffered a heart attack on Dec. 28 and underwent quadruple bypass heart surgery. According to Billings, Pepin is out of the hospital but was not feeling well enough to attend the awards dinner. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom