Pubdate: Wed, 30 Jan 2002
Source: Daily Herald (IL)
Copyright: 2002 The Daily Herald Company
Contact:  http://www.dailyherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/107
Author: Sara Burnett

700 TURN OUT TO TALK ABOUT DRUGS

One man told the audience of overdosing five times on heroin before being 
arrested - a moment he calls the answer to his prayers.

His mother recalled how she prayed over her son's hospital bed the night of 
his first overdose, and how she pledged not to let the drugs win.

Another mother - this one not so blessed - told of learning too late that 
her daughter was using illegal club drugs.

A Kane County judge said it was the death of another young person that 
prompted him to start a court anti-drug program that combines law 
enforcement and treatment.

Though the details of their stories differ, each of the panelists at a 
community forum on drugs sponsored by the Daily Herald on Tuesday night 
agreed on one central point: Drugs are taking hold of too many lives in the 
suburbs and, to fight them, it will take a communitywide effort.

"If you think it can't happen to your son or daughter, your brother or 
sister, or your mom or dad, you're sorely mistaken, because it can happen 
to anybody," said Scott McDonald, a 24-year-old recovering heroin addict 
from St. Charles who has seen at least nine friends die from heroin 
overdoses. "While we have a chance to do something about it, I pray we do 
before we lose anybody else."

About 700 people attended the nearly three-hour forum and question- 
and-answer session at the Arcada Theater in St. Charles. Many were parents 
and their children. Others were police officers, social workers and 
educators. Several dozen identified themselves as recovering drug addicts.

The forum was sponsored as a follow-up to a four-day series that appeared 
in the Daily Herald late last year titled "The Hidden Scourge: How heroin 
and club drugs have taken root in the suburbs."

In the series, the Daily Herald reported that at least 13 suburban young 
people have died from heroin or club drugs in the past two years. So far 
this year, the newspaper has learned of at least two other young people who 
have overdosed on illegal drugs, Daily Herald Projects Editor Madeleine 
Doubek told the crowd.

"Every single one of those young men and women represent lost potential," 
Doubek said. "We're here tonight to help all of us work on strategies to 
prevent more people from dying. ... We don't want to see any more potential 
lost."

Several panel members urged parents to educate themselves about drugs, to 
talk to their children - and listen to them - and to look for warning signs 
of drug use.

"Talk early, and talk often," said Carol Falkowski, a federal drug 
researcher and the director of research communications at the 
Minnesota-based Hazelden Foundation. "Kids don't need a lecture, they need 
to be listened to."

Courtney Barkei, a 21-year-old recovering heroin addict who grew up in 
Batavia, told audience members she started using alcohol, then drugs, as a 
teenager as a way of dealing with feelings of depression and anxiety. A 
former high school cheerleader who by all accounts came from "a good 
family," Barkei has seven felony convictions ranging from theft to forgery 
on her record, and has spent time in three county jails.

"I used heroin to cover up those feelings I didn't know what to do with," 
Barkei said. "Teach your children that it's OK to feel and it's OK to 
express those feelings."

Kate Patton, a Rolling Meadows resident whose daughter, Kelley Baker, died 
of an Ecstasy overdose in 1999, urged parents to become "information 
junkies" about drugs.

"We go to the grocery store very prepared with a grocery list in hand," 
Patton said. "But are we as prepared to talk to our kids about drugs?"

Among the warning signs that a young person might be using drugs, Falkowski 
said, are: a change in peer group; a change in interests and hobbies; an 
increase in defensiveness; a change in personal hygiene, sleeping or eating 
patterns; abrupt mood swings; and stealing and lying.

Noting that most drug users get drugs from friends, not faceless dealers, 
St. Charles Police Chief Donald Shaw also urged parents to often ask their 
children where they're going, who they're going with, and to pay attention 
to the people their kids are spending time with.

Shaw and Kane County Circuit Court Judge James Doyle, who directs the 
county's drug court, stressed that law enforcement alone cannot solve the 
problem of illegal drug use.

"We need information, we need your assistance, we need dialogue like this," 
Shaw said.

Doyle, who requires frequent drug tests and a minimum 90-day stay in a 
treatment center for many offenders, said: "We are facing a terrible 
epidemic, and it has been uncovered. ... Now we have to go after it. It's a 
disease, and we have to treat it like a disease."

Scott McDonald's mother, Linda McDonald, encouraged parents and users to 
ask for help, and to not be ashamed or embarrassed if a child or other 
family member has a problem with drugs.

"We all have choices," McDonald said. "Our choice is for hope and not defeat."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth