Pubdate: Wed, 29 Dec 2004 Source: Times, The (Gainesville, GA) Copyright: 2004 Gainesville Times Contact: http://www.gainesvilletimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2701 PROGRAM IS WORTH THE COST TO FIGHT DRUGS AND VIOLENCE Time and money is spent each year to teach fifth-graders the damage that comes with drug abuse, gangs and violence. If anyone wonders about the results, the 10-year-old students who have completed the program can explain. Carlos Mauricio Figueredo, a fifth-grader at Lyman Hall, wrote a paper on completion of the program, and his first sentence speaks volumes. Carlos said, "I feel safe because now I know what's good and bad." He said he also can teach his brother about what he learned. Words better than these would be hard to find. Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or DARE, was taught in county schools for a number of years, and this year the program was changed to Avoiding Drugs, Violence and Negative Choices Early, or ADVANCE. The ADVANCE program is based on a program from Gwinnett County that was adapted to Hall's needs. Lessons about Internet safety were among the subjects added. Deputies in charge of the program worked with representatives from the Hall County School System to make sure it met local needs while conforming to National Health Standards and the Georgia Quality Core Curriculum. All fifth-graders are encouraged to participate, but parents are asked to approve the participation and also asked to be involved themselves. In addition to teaching 10 weeks of ADVANCE, the officers also go into kindergartens through fourth-grades telling the youngsters how to stay safe and where to go for help if strangers approach them. Hall deputy Lt. Gene Joy, who manages the program, said that the students who participate learn "that there are people who care about them and want them to have a successful life." Carlos tells us more about what he learned: "It is important to be drug, violence and gang free, to not end up six feet underground, to have a happy life without health problems, to live a happy life without having to run from the police, to be a good student and to have my dreams come true, and to give my sons in the future a good example." Akeem "Doobie" Havens is another Lyman Hall fifth-grader who wrote about what he learned in ADVANCE. His words included: "It is important to be gang free because gangs hurt people, steal things like cars, electronics, break into houses and write on the sides of buildings which cost all of us money to replace or repair. It is important to be drug free because drugs ruin your thinking, your bodies, and how you do your work. ... It is important to be violence free because violence causes families to yell and fight with each other. When adults fight sometimes they hurt each other. Many times one of the family goes to jail. When people fight with each other, the children are afraid and when they grow up they fight because they don't know how to settle problems any other way." These fifth-graders soon will be at the age when children become involved in gangs, but now they know the dangers, and maybe the temptations will continue to lessen. Gang activity in Hall actually has decreased somewhat because of the efforts of law enforcement. Twenty-two gangs have been documented, but only about three of these gangs are considered problems. Officers arrested 13 members of the KES gang about three months ago; their pictures appeared in the paper with the story, and this was a strong deterrent. If graffiti is found anywhere, it's photographed, then painted over. This is another way to send a message to gang members saying they will not be tolerated. The new ADVANCE program will begin again in January. Looking at what these two young men have written about their impressions shows that it's well worth the time and money it takes. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek