Pubdate: Sun, 16 Jul 2006
Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO)
Copyright: 2006 Columbia Daily Tribune
Contact:  http://www.columbiatribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91
Author: Janese Heavin, of the Tribune's Staff
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)
Note: Prints the street address of LTE writers.

SCHOOL DISTRICT LEADERS PUT FOCUS ON DRUG USE

Columbia Board of Education members say they've "danced  around"
student drug use long enough and are ready to  do something about it.

"Maybe the time is right for the development of a  community task
force to talk about how we can get a  handle on this," board member
Chuck Headley said.

Headley cited substance abuse as one of the issues he  wants the
district to address in the coming year during  the school board's
retreat yesterday. Other members  appeared to agree.

Board President Karla DeSpain suggested developing a  multi-agency
work force to tackle the problem from  multiple angles. Although it's
a community issue, not  just a school issue, "somebody's got to take
it on,"  she said.

"We've danced around it long enough," David Ballenger  agreed. "It's
an issue no one wants to address."

Ballenger served on the school board in January 2001  when a mother
attended a board meeting and accused  school officials of denying
there was a drug problem.

Although more and more school districts have adopted  drug testing for
students who participate in sports and  other extracurricular
activities, the Columbia school  board has not talked about that
measure. The board had  a brief discussion about the use of drug dogs
earlier  this year, but it hasn't entertained the idea.

Yesterday, board members said parents had expressed  concerns about
drug and alcohol abuse. Community  members have talked to the Tribune
in recent weeks  about what they say is a growing problem in the
school  district.

In 2003, the St. Louis-based Crossroads Program opened  an
administrative office in Columbia because of the  growing demand for
services. Since that year, about 50  Columbia families have sent their
teenagers to the  program for treatment of drug addiction.

In 2005, the Columbia Police Department arrested 79  teenagers under
the age of 18 for drug-related  offenses, Police Chief Randy Boehm
said.

School board member Don Ludwig said he wants to know  how kids are
getting drugs and how those substances are  getting into schools.

In a drug survey given mostly to ninth-graders earlier  this year, 65
percent of students said it's fairly easy  to get alcohol, and 62
percent said it's fairly easy to  get cigarettes. About 62 percent
also said it would be  easy to get marijuana in Columbia, and 75
percent of  the surveyed students said they didn't think police  would
catch them if they smoked marijuana.

In April, two West Junior students told the Tribune  that drugs are
common in the schools. During a Youth  Community Coalition forum,
Aurielle Sisson-White and  Andrea Thames said their friends are
"wizards at  hiding," including girls who hide bags of substances in
their hair clips.

"Drinking is a big thing, but the everyday thing is  mostly drugs,"
Aurielle said.

DeSpain said she'd like to know whether open campuses  help when
trying to curtail drug use during school  hours. Hickman and Rock
Bridge high schools allow kids  to leave campus during lunch hours.
Rock Bridge also  lets students leave the school grounds during their
unassigned time every other day. DeSpain stopped short  of saying a
closed campus would deter drug use, but she  said the open campus is
something that should be looked  at.

Board members agreed the community is tolerant of drugs  and
alcohol.

"That's one strike against us," Ludwig said.

"I don't think laws act as a deterrent," Darin Preis  said. "When it
comes to drugs and alcohol, kids are  exposed to it as an ordinary
part of what they see."

In the drug survey, 44 percent of the students surveyed  know at least
one adult who uses marijuana, cocaine or  other drugs. More than 76
percent have known an adult  who has gotten drunk or high in the past
year.
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MAP posted-by: Derek