News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: Drug Problems Take Center Stage |
Title: | US NJ: Drug Problems Take Center Stage |
Published On: | 2006-08-23 |
Source: | Hanover Eagle, The (NJ) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 05:03:40 |
DRUG PROBLEMS TAKE CENTER STAGE
County Authorities Discuss Programs With Substance Awareness Groups In Hanover
HANOVER TWP. - Even as "Operation Painkiller," a drug sweep resulting
in 56 arrests in late July on prescription painkiller medication,
brought heightened awareness to the drug problem facing Morris
County's young people, substance awareness groups and law enforcement
officials concede the problem is not going to go away anytime soon.
Morris County Assistant Prosecutor Bob Weber met with about 80 people
associated with substance awareness groups from around the county
Monday at the Morris County Human Services building at 340 West
Hanover Ave. to discuss the many programs the county has to combat
drug abuse. He noted the drug sweep was a "real eye opener to law enforcement."
The meeting was sponsored by the Governor's Council on Alcoholism and
Drug Abuse, which funds the 30 substance awareness groups in the county.
Weber told the crowd it had been the assumption of law enforcement
that pain killer abuse occurred when people using prescribed
medication became addicted to it.
But as the "Operation Painkiller" investigation unfolded over a
two-month period this spring it became apparent today's painkiller
problem is an entirely different issue, now involving people who buy
and sell the drugs like any other narcotic.
He said the prosecutor's office will have a number of tools at its
disposal in the coming months to combat drug abuse, including
broadening drug testing policies in school systems.
Hanover Park Superintendent of Schools John Adamus had earlier said
current state law only allows random drug tests for athletes,
although a new state law that just went into effect, will force any
athlete who joins a sport that has a championship game to be tested.
The only other time students may be tested is if they appeared under
the influence of an intoxicant, according to Adamus.
Gregg Benson, chairman of the Morris County Mental Health, Substance
Abuse Advisory Board told the crowd painkillers like Oxcycontin are a
narcotic and objected to the term "gateway drug" which has been used
to describe it. Benson said painkillers devastate the brain. "We
teach our kids to drink and do drugs," he said. "We have a pain, we
take something."
Morris County Superintendent of Schools Thomas Kane said he was
shocked to see the kind of young people being arrested during the
early morning sweep July 27. Kane had been asked to come to the
county's firefighters and police training facility in Parsippany that
was used as a holding area for the sweep.
Kane noted many of the students, most of whom were graduates or
students at Whippany Park High School, were "quality people" as he
said police officers described them. "We're talking about intelligent
kids," he added.
Kane noted the drugs of choice changes with each new student
generation, noting that pain killers are the top drugs now, but five
years ago it was Ecstasy school administrators feared most.
The Hanover Township Substance Abuse Alliance has faced the most
publicity since both the drug sweep and the apparent heroin overdose
deaths of two Hanover women in late June and early July. Some of that
attention has been critical, such as when the alliance was attacked
for doing nothing for years to stem the flow of drugs at a July
Hanover Township Committee meeting.
On Monday the group came in for praise from Mount Olive Sgt. Scott
Van Ness. "Hanover's publicity is a classic example of how parents'
heads are in the sand until something falls in their laps."
He added substance awareness groups should promote themselves to make
them more visible, calling them the "pulse of the community."
He noted Mount Olive would begin the school year with a police school
resource officer stationed at district schools.
The Hanover Park School District has already put in place school
resource officers for both Hanover Park High School, which serves
students in East Hanover and Florham Park, and Whippany Park High
School, which serves students in Hanover Township.
Hanover Township Substance Awareness Alliance member Majella LoBello
said the emphasis should be placed more on parents than institutions,
claiming there are still parents who will not take responsibility.
"The schools will drug test, but so should parents," she said.
Speaking to Van Ness, LoBello asked what parents need to be told to
help their children avoid drugs.
Van Ness said words should never be sugar coated and the blunt truth
is the best approach. Van Ness, along with Kane, suggested community
centers may be a place to start to offer alternatives for teens with
nothing else to do.
County Authorities Discuss Programs With Substance Awareness Groups In Hanover
HANOVER TWP. - Even as "Operation Painkiller," a drug sweep resulting
in 56 arrests in late July on prescription painkiller medication,
brought heightened awareness to the drug problem facing Morris
County's young people, substance awareness groups and law enforcement
officials concede the problem is not going to go away anytime soon.
Morris County Assistant Prosecutor Bob Weber met with about 80 people
associated with substance awareness groups from around the county
Monday at the Morris County Human Services building at 340 West
Hanover Ave. to discuss the many programs the county has to combat
drug abuse. He noted the drug sweep was a "real eye opener to law enforcement."
The meeting was sponsored by the Governor's Council on Alcoholism and
Drug Abuse, which funds the 30 substance awareness groups in the county.
Weber told the crowd it had been the assumption of law enforcement
that pain killer abuse occurred when people using prescribed
medication became addicted to it.
But as the "Operation Painkiller" investigation unfolded over a
two-month period this spring it became apparent today's painkiller
problem is an entirely different issue, now involving people who buy
and sell the drugs like any other narcotic.
He said the prosecutor's office will have a number of tools at its
disposal in the coming months to combat drug abuse, including
broadening drug testing policies in school systems.
Hanover Park Superintendent of Schools John Adamus had earlier said
current state law only allows random drug tests for athletes,
although a new state law that just went into effect, will force any
athlete who joins a sport that has a championship game to be tested.
The only other time students may be tested is if they appeared under
the influence of an intoxicant, according to Adamus.
Gregg Benson, chairman of the Morris County Mental Health, Substance
Abuse Advisory Board told the crowd painkillers like Oxcycontin are a
narcotic and objected to the term "gateway drug" which has been used
to describe it. Benson said painkillers devastate the brain. "We
teach our kids to drink and do drugs," he said. "We have a pain, we
take something."
Morris County Superintendent of Schools Thomas Kane said he was
shocked to see the kind of young people being arrested during the
early morning sweep July 27. Kane had been asked to come to the
county's firefighters and police training facility in Parsippany that
was used as a holding area for the sweep.
Kane noted many of the students, most of whom were graduates or
students at Whippany Park High School, were "quality people" as he
said police officers described them. "We're talking about intelligent
kids," he added.
Kane noted the drugs of choice changes with each new student
generation, noting that pain killers are the top drugs now, but five
years ago it was Ecstasy school administrators feared most.
The Hanover Township Substance Abuse Alliance has faced the most
publicity since both the drug sweep and the apparent heroin overdose
deaths of two Hanover women in late June and early July. Some of that
attention has been critical, such as when the alliance was attacked
for doing nothing for years to stem the flow of drugs at a July
Hanover Township Committee meeting.
On Monday the group came in for praise from Mount Olive Sgt. Scott
Van Ness. "Hanover's publicity is a classic example of how parents'
heads are in the sand until something falls in their laps."
He added substance awareness groups should promote themselves to make
them more visible, calling them the "pulse of the community."
He noted Mount Olive would begin the school year with a police school
resource officer stationed at district schools.
The Hanover Park School District has already put in place school
resource officers for both Hanover Park High School, which serves
students in East Hanover and Florham Park, and Whippany Park High
School, which serves students in Hanover Township.
Hanover Township Substance Awareness Alliance member Majella LoBello
said the emphasis should be placed more on parents than institutions,
claiming there are still parents who will not take responsibility.
"The schools will drug test, but so should parents," she said.
Speaking to Van Ness, LoBello asked what parents need to be told to
help their children avoid drugs.
Van Ness said words should never be sugar coated and the blunt truth
is the best approach. Van Ness, along with Kane, suggested community
centers may be a place to start to offer alternatives for teens with
nothing else to do.
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