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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Parents React to Overdose Case
Title:US CA: Parents React to Overdose Case
Published On:2004-04-27
Source:Oakland Tribune, The (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 11:26:38
PARENTS REACT TO OVERDOSE CASE

BELMONT -- As a Ralston Intermediate School eighth-grader who overdosed on
Ecstasy remained in critical condition at an area hospital Monday, parents
and administrators called for more community involvement to end student
drug abuse.

"We're concerned that drugs are so prevalent in our schools, but it's not
just a Ralston issue," parent Melinda Hartford said outside Belmont-Redwood
Shores Elementary School District offices.

"We can stand here and point fingers at parents, and point fingers at the
school district, but the bottom line is it's society problem," Hartford
said. "If a middle school student can access these drugs there's a huge
problem that everyone needs to address."

Belmont Police Capt. Patrick Halleran said the victim was one of three
14-year-old girls who took Ecstasy Friday night at a slumber party in a
home on Redwood Avenue.

A parent, who had been in a different part of the house during the
sleepover, called 9-1-1 at 7:15 a.m. upon discovering one of the girls
unconscious, Halleran said.

Halleran said the girls purchased the drug sometime after school Friday,
but not on school grounds. Police have arrested two Belmont residents
accused of supplying the drugs to the girls -- a 17-year-old boy and
20-year-old Antonio Rivera.

Rivera, who was arrested after police allegedly found multiple kinds of
drugs at his residence Sunday, is scheduled to be arraigned today on
numerous charges.

I'm not blaming the school district, but I am saying that one thing that
could help is the DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program, Rausa
said. They only have DARE in the fifth grade, when they should have it for
the older kids who are starting to do drugs.

Superintendent John McIntosh said the district has a fairly extensive
drug-education program at the middle school level, and noted that parental
involvement is a key component.

"I think we do a lot. That's really difficult to say when we have a student
in critical condition, but we invest tremendous amounts of money in drug-
and alcohol-abuse education," McIntosh said.

McIntosh said in addition to providing extra counselors at Ralston Monday,
the district sent a letter home with students that urged parents to be
diligent in talking to children about drugs on a daily basis.

McIntosh said parents also need to take advantage of opportunities to
educate themselves about talking to their children about drugs. Three weeks
ago, more than a dozen area schools and the Belmont Police Department
invited thousands of parents to an informational meeting on the subject.
About 50 attended.

"It's so easy for a parent to be in denial and say, 'I know my son or
daughter like no one else does, I trust them, and they would never do
drugs,'" he said. "The reality is their kids are doing drugs."
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