Pubdate: Tue, 20 Aug 2002
Source: Deseret News (UT)
Copyright: 2002 Deseret News Publishing Corp.
Contact:  http://www.desnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124
Author: Greg Toppo, AP education writer

SCHOOL DRUG USE DOWN?

Hard Line Having An Impact, But Pot's Still Easy To Buy

WASHINGTON - Few teenagers say they've tried marijuana, but teens say it's 
easier to buy than cigarettes or beer, according to a national survey.

More than one-third of teens polled by the National Center on Addiction and 
Substance Abuse said they could buy marijuana in just a few hours, 27 
percent in an hour or less.

For the first time since the study began in 1996, marijuana edged out 
cigarettes and beer as the easiest drug for teenagers to buy - 34 percent 
said it's the easiest of the three, compared with 31 percent for cigarettes 
and 14 percent for beer.

Overall, however, 75 percent of students said they have not smoked marijuana.

The annual survey of 1,000 teenagers was being released Tuesday. It did not 
specify whether drugs are easy or difficult to buy at school, but 63 
percent of students said their schools are "drug-free," nearly double the 
number who said the same in 1998.

Joel Willen, principal of Pershing Middle School in Houston, said teachers 
and administrators are seeing less drug activity.

"I think the kids are not bringing whatever it is they're doing, if they're 
doing it, to school," he said.

The school's drug-prevention programs, such as DARE, are paired with a 
get-tough policy on drugs that includes twice-yearly, random locker and 
backpack searches by drug-sniffing dogs, Willen said. Students caught using 
or selling drugs can be sent to an alternative school or even expelled.

"They know we take a real hard line on drugs," he said.

One in 12 students believes a teacher at their school uses illegal drugs, 
according to the survey. A fourth of students said they've seen illegal 
drugs being sold at school, but a little more than half said they'd report 
someone they saw selling or using drugs, the highest level since 1996.

Gerald Tirozzi, executive director of the National Association of Secondary 
School Principals, said student drug use has been dropping for the past 
four or five years as communities began financing anti- drug programs.

"I think we're starting to see the fruition of some of those programs," he 
said.

More than half of students said they don't drink alcohol in a typical week.

While one in four pupils said at least one parent smokes cigarettes, 69 
percent said they have never smoked.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that, by 
the time they complete high school, 47 percent of teenagers have smoked 
marijuana, 24 percent have used another illicit drug and 81 percent have 
drunk alcohol. The agency also estimates that 70 percent have smoked 
cigarettes.

The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, based at Columbia 
University, polls teenagers on drug use and the presence of drugs in 
schools. This year's random telephone survey of students age 12-17 was 
conducted Dec. 27, 2001-Feb. 6, 2002, by QEV Analytics. It has a margin of 
error of plus or minus 3.1 percent age points.

On the Net: National Center: www.casacolumbia.org
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