Pubdate: Mon, 28 Feb 2005
Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY)
Copyright: 2005 Lexington Herald-Leader
Contact:  http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240
Author: Lee Mueller And Bill Estep
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

UNITE WON'T HELP PAY COACH

Howard Doesn't Meet Qualifications For Drug Counselor, Board Says

WHITESBURG - An anti-drug agency has thrown a flag on the Letcher County 
school system's attempt to pay a football coach with money earmarked to 
hire a substance-abuse counselor.

Directors of Operation UNITE, which is providing money for drug counselors 
in 44 Appalachian Kentucky school districts, voted unanimously not to 
approve hiring championship coach Hillard Howard as Letcher County's 
UNITE-funded counselor, said Karen Engle, executive director of the agency. 
UNITE stands for Unlawful Narcotics Investigation, Treatment and Education.

Engle said she notified Letch-er County Superintendent Anna Laura Craft 
last week that Howard did not meet UNITE's requirements for the counseling 
job. Those positions require applicants to either have, or be working to 
get, a certification in drug and alcohol counseling, or to have a degree in 
psychology, sociology, or social work and five years' experience as a 
counselor.

Engle and Tom Handy, a former prosecutor who chairs the UNITE board, said 
they had nothing against Howard. He is a community leader who has a great 
deal of experience with young people, Engle said -- someone she wants 
involved in the fight against drugs.

But he is not a mental health professional, she said.

"We can't pay for football coaches," Engle said.

Craft insisted that her request to hire Howard as the school system's 
UNITE-funded drug counselor was not an end run toward the real goal of 
getting a football coach.

"Football had nothing to do with any of that," said Craft. It seemed 
logical to place Howard in the UNITE position because of his background, 
which included helping organize student drug testing in Pike County, and 
because she wanted to avoid duplicating drug-prevention efforts, Craft said.

Counselors hired through the federally funded UNITE program are to focus on 
talking to students to help them with substance-abuse problems, including 
trying to get them not to use drugs or alcohol.

Howard said that although he does not meet the requirements UNITE set for 
those jobs, he feels he is well qualified to help students.

That is not only because of his long experience as an administrator and 
football coach in Pikeville, Howard said, but also because of his 
background. Growing up in a Letch-er County coal camp as one of 14 
children, he was a "problem kid" himself, he said, so he can relate to 
troubled young people.

However, Howard acknowledged that the main reason he went to work in 
Letcher County was to build a football program as head coach at the new 
Letcher County Central High School, which is set to open this fall.

"But as far as being involved in the UNITE program, I wasn't overly excited 
about that in the first place," he said.

Caller Criticized Hiring

The decision to hire How-ard quickly ignited controversy in Letcher County 
after he started work in January.

On Jan. 19, The Mountain Eagle, the county's largest local newspaper, 
published a dia-tribe from an anonymous caller in its popular Speak Your 
Piece column, blistering both Craft and the Letcher school board for 
reportedly hiring Howard with money intended to pay a counselor.

Calling the decision an underhanded misappropriation of funds aimed at 
getting a football coach, the caller said sarcastically, "After all, 
everyone knows we don't have a drug problem in this county, but we do need 
a ball coach."

Howard, 57, retired from Pikeville Independent Schools in 2002 after 
compiling a 208-48 record as a football coach and winning three state Class 
A titles. He had also been an assistant principal for 15 years and 
principal for two.

Football coaches in Kentucky typically also have another job in the school 
system.

After retiring from the Pike-ville system, Howard went to work as a 
classified employee for the Pike County schools as a safe-schools 
coordinator and helped with the Shelby Valley High football program, while 
beginning to draw retirement pay from his earlier career.

State law allows a school employee who has been in a certified job -- a 
teacher or administrator -- to return to work right away in a classified 
job while collecting pension pay. Classified jobs in Kentucky schools are 
those that don't require educational certification, such as custodians, 
cooks and bus drivers.

Classified employees also can coach sports teams, said Lisa Gross, 
spokeswoman for the Kentucky Department of Education.

To Be Paid By School System

Craft and the Letcher County school board hired Howard as a classified 
employee. His annual salary is $62,500 -- $50,000 as the drug-prevention 
and safe-schools coordinator and $12,500 to coach football, Craft said.

UNITE has budgeted a salary of $28,000 each for the 31 substance-abuse 
counselors it will pay for in the 44 school systems in its area of Eastern 
and southern Kentucky, as well as $16,000 per position to cover benefits, 
training and travel, for a total of $44,000.

Craft said Howard will remain as both the football coach and the 
drug-prevention and safe-schools coordinator even without funding from 
UNITE. The school system will pay him from its general fund, she said.

UNITE is a non-profit agency created by U.S. Rep. Harold "Hal" Rogers to 
fight drug problems in his district.

In addition to paying for counselors, the program's treatment initiative 
involves assessing how the schools are providing anti-drug education, 
helping with improvements, training teachers to incorporate drug-abuse 
prevention information into lessons, and providing teaching materials if 
necessary. It has also provided money for two new drug-treatment centers.
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