Pubdate: Fri, 24 Mar 2006
Source: Petoskey News-Review (MI)
Copyright: 2006 Petoskey News-Review
Contact:  http://www.petoskeynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4115
Author: Ryan Bentley, News-Review Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

COATS: KEEPING KIDS AWAY FROM DRUGS

When Petoskey school officials focused in on substance abuse issues facing 
local youth in 2002, the early discussion was marked by debate.

That year, a school board member proposed random drug testing of students 
involved in extracurriculars as a way to deter substance use. When 
community input was sought that fall on the idea, reaction was mixed and 
sometimes emotional.

In the midst of the discussion, school board members appointed a committee 
to explore issues related to youth drug use. Though the drug testing idea 
was shelved indefinitely, the committee's work continues more than three 
years later.

The anti-drug committee has come to be known as Community Offering 
Alternatives to Substance-abuse (COATS). Since its inception, organizers 
have aimed for a collaborative approach to drug concerns.

And in the eyes of two national educational organizations, they've 
succeeded in finding it.

A statewide honor

In February, the Petoskey district was recognized as Michigan's statewide 
winner in the National Civic Star Award competition. This program, 
organized by the American Association of School Administrators and Sodexho 
School Services, honors schools which have cooperated with their 
communities to create innovative programs that advance learning.

"It's pretty prestigious," said Petoskey school superintendent John 
Scholten. "It's a great honor to see this."

In all, 32 state-level Civic Star awards were presented around the United 
States for 2006, with St. Charles Parish Schools in Louisiana receiving the 
national award.

Barb Kurtz of the Petoskey Education Foundation applied for the Civic Star 
recognition on COATS' behalf.

"It's very unique and has a significant outreach into the community, 
involves the community at many levels," she said of COATS.

Added Petoskey school board member Tina DeMoore: "The staff, parent and 
student members of COATS have done an excellent job of raising awareness 
and educating the community about youth substance abuse. They have 
facilitated direct services to students facing substance abuse challenges. 
They have also worked to improve parent-to-parent communication. COATS 
continues to provide innovative substance-free activities to middle and 
high school students. Perhaps most importantly, COATS members have shared 
their ideas and their vision with other Northern Michigan districts that 
are struggling with the same issues in their communities. This has provided 
a network of communication and information about the topic across 
communities that can only serve to further raise awareness and enhance 
services to youth challenged by substance abuse."

Zeroing in

Last fall, "Katherine," a high-school sophomore who requested that her real 
name not be used, experienced a "bad trip" when she took LSD. Scared by the 
blackout she suffered, she sought advice from Jim Rummer, Petoskey High 
School's assistant principal and a facilitator for COATS.

Rummer referred her to Petoskey's Harbor Hall substance abuse treatment 
organization.

Since then, Katherine - who'd also used marijuana and tried an assortment 
of other drugs - has received individual counseling at Harbor Hall and 
gotten involved with a weekly support group COATS offers at PHS.

"It's people my age," she said of the group. "You can trust them. They're 
people to talk to that have been going through the same stuff you have."

When the support group meetings begin, Katherine said students share their 
progress in avoiding substance use. She and one other group member have 
made staying drug-free a competition of sorts.

Lately, the weekly meetings have been drawing about 15 students. A Harbor 
Hall counselor is on hand for the meetings to answer questions and give 
presentations on topics of interest.

Rummer said COATS can cover the cost for families to obtain a confidential 
drug test for a child at Harbor Hall. He said three to five families make 
arrangements for such a test on a monthly basis.

If test results indicate drug use, Rummer added that COATS will cover the 
cost for an initial treatment consultation at Harbor Hall.

Through its fundraising, COATS has helped Petoskey expand the number of 
sweeps which contraband-detecting dogs make on school property. Rummer said 
four of these searches - intended as deterrents to drug use - have taken 
place so far this year.

While school officials have found the sweeps effective to some extent, 
Rummer said dogs have continued to turn up illicit substances each time.

"It has been a deterrent, but there's still a need for it," he said.

COATS also has helped arrange several guest speakers to address substance 
abuse and related issues with Petoskey students. In cooperation with local 
law enforcement officers, Rummer has presented workshops to help parents 
and educators identify common drug paraphernalia.

Hitting it off with youth

All in all, COATS aims not for a reactive approach to drug use, Rummer 
said, but for a proactive one which students can easily embrace. The 
selection of a "warm and soft" acronym like COATS was made for this purpose.

Based on a survey of local youth that the Emmet 20/20 community visioning 
group took several years ago, Rummer said some area teens seem to sense 
that the community doesn't care much about them.

COATS has established a birthday recognition program in Petoskey schools. 
On their birthdays, middle- and high-school students' names are announced 
on the schools' public-address systems. COATS provides the students with a 
candy-filled Nalgene sports bottle as a gift.

"In many kids' lives, unfortunately, that might be the only recognition 
they get that day," Rummer said.

COATS also arranges a variety of supervised social activities for youth in 
Petoskey. In part, Rummer said these have been organized in response to 
teens' complaints that the area doesn't offer much for them to do.

"Our statistics will show you the drug use is strongest at the unsupervised 
times," he added.

For high school students, COATS has arranged twice-monthly dances at the 
YMCA of Northern Michigan. With attendance sometimes straining the YMCA's 
capacity, some recent dances have taken place at the larger Emmet County 
Fairgrounds Community Center.

"There's a lot of people at the dances that could be out doing drugs, but 
instead they're there," Katherine said.

For middle-school students, COATS has offered monthly outings to the movies 
and other destinations.

Steering the process

COATS' early meetings drew dozens of people - school officials, parents, 
students, teachers, drug treatment and criminal justice professionals and 
other interested local residents.

"It went from 60-70 people in the beginning down to a core group of about 
12 people," said Vickie Van Slembrouck, a Petoskey parent who's been 
involved since COATS' inception. "We always encourage parents to become 
involved."

For Van Slembrouck, who has a son recovering from substance abuse, COATS 
provided a means of personal healing.

"It's still my way of healing and helping others," she said. "I think one 
of the most important things we offer is help and support to the parents 
who need it."

The Petoskey-Harbor Springs Area Community Foundation and the Emmet County 
Local Revenue Sharing Board have been COATS' major funding sources. Local 
service clubs and individuals have contributed financially, too.

"We operate on a $30,000 per year budget, but I think we're seeing a lot of 
bang for the buck," Rummer said.

Emmet County Circuit Judge Charles Johnson was active in COATS' early 
meetings, and still keeps track of the group's activities.

Noting that a significant share of the people who commit crimes have 
histories of drug and alcohol abuse, Johnson said COATS' work is important.

"I certainly support the mission and think that the group is doing good 
things to give students an alternative to drug use," he said.

Expanding the network

In neighboring Cheboygan County, another judge has embraced Petoskey's 
COATS approach and is working to help local schools establish similar programs.

"I really am impressed with what they've done," Cheboygan County Probate 
Judge Robert John Butts said. "In order to combat the problem, you need the 
involvement of everyone in the community - parents, teachers, kids, 
professionals. The COATS group is a working relationship among those people."

Using state grant money his court obtains for delinquency prevention, Butts 
has provided school districts around Cheboygan County with $1,000 apiece in 
seed money to help start their own COATS chapters. Groups have formed in 
the Cheboygan, Inland Lakes, Mackinaw City and Wolverine districts, with 
Cheboygan's Harbor Hall branch providing support along the way.

To Butts, the opportunity for youth to support one another as they try to 
resolve drug issues is one valuable aspect of COATS.

"As we often say in our juvenile department, one at a time," Butts said. 
"If we get one student headed in the right direction, we're successful."

Inland Lakes High School principal Don Killingbeck said Petoskey's 
anti-substance abuse efforts were similar to his own school's, so that 
district decided to use the COATS name as well.

Support groups, monthly student birthday parties arranged in cooperation 
with Students Against Drunk Driving and educational programs for parents 
have been part of Inland Lakes' COATS program. The group also puts a 
priority on afterschool offerings for students, like self-defense classes 
and tutoring.

In terms of risky behavior, "the statistics or the data shows that 3-5 p.m. 
is the most dangerous time for teenagers," Killingbeck noted.

In the Harbor Springs school district, participants in Community Against 
Substance Abuse - which also arranges programs like counseling, student 
assemblies and drug-dog sweeps - have compared notes with COATS as well.

"No matter where I go, I learn something different from what another 
district is doing," Rummer said.

COATS supporters also are exploring possibilities to establish the program 
in schools around Charlevoix, Mackinac and Presque Isle counties.

"We're trying to get one started in all of the communities in the tip of 
the mitt and the Upper Peninsula so we can get people together and share 
information," Butts said.

Sizing it up

In recent years, Petoskey school officials have noted that youth substance 
abuse issues in their district are similar to what other districts around 
the region face, and that local drug use surveys show usage rates close to 
the national average.

Still, more than one of these officials has noted the desire to achieve 
better-than average statistics.

In 2002-03, Petoskey middle- and high-school students completed anonymous 
surveys developed by Colorado State University regarding their drug use 
histories.

Among Petoskey 12th-graders, 50 percent reported using alcohol in the month 
leading up to the survey, 22 percent used marijuana, 8 percent used 
cocaine, 7 percent used stimulants and 9 percent used hallucinogens. Among 
12th graders nationwide, a National Institute on Drug Abuse survey in 2000 
showed that usage rates for these drugs were 50 percent, 22 percent, 2 
percent, 5 percent and 3 percent, respectively.

When Petoskey students again take the Colorado State University survey 
sometime this year, Rummer said school officials likely will compare the 
results with 2002-03 figures in hope of finding out whether COATS' efforts 
have had a noticeable impact.

Jack Waldvogel was the Petoskey school board member who proposed the drug 
testing idea for students in extracurriculars in 2002. Though he believes 
this practice still could be a useful deterrent, "it doesn't seem as 
necessary now as it did before," he said.

"We're addressing them in as positive a manner as we can within the realm 
of the school district," Waldvogel added, noting that Harbor Hall's support 
of the anti-drug efforts has been helpful. "If someone has alternative 
solutions that they think would work better, I think everyone would be 
happy to hear them. So far, it has been a positive situation to have both 
COATS and Harbor Hall there."

Terry Newton, executive director of Harbor Hall and a member of the COATS 
committee, said he was proud to see the school district and its partners 
receive the Civic Star award.

"A lot of times, communities try to hide and pretend that a problem doesn't 
exist," he said. "I'm really proud of our communities that have tried to 
take a progressive stand."

Help available

Petoskey's Community Offering Alternatives to Substance-abuse (COATS) 
offers Northern Michigan families the opportunity to obtain a free drug 
test for a child. It can determine the presence of eight common substances. 
When tests show the presence of drugs, COATS will cover the cost for an 
initial consultation at the Harbor Hall substance abuse treatment center.

COATS organizers meet at 7 p.m. on the last Monday of each month in the 
Petoskey High School media center. The public is welcome to attend.

For more information on COATS' services or opportunities to get involved, 
call Jim Rummer at 348-2103 or Vickie Van Slembrouck at 881-0942.
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D