Drug task force is getting the information out
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Suzie Harrison
Laguna Beach High School Principal Nancy Blade is pleased with the
functionality and diversity of the Laguna Beach Unified School
District and the city’s joint Youth Substance Abuse Task Force.
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman is said to be an integral force behind this
group and has brought the police, school district and the city closer
in working together as a cohesive team. Parents are also involved and
students have been invited.
“Mayor Kinsman brought the idea of the policy to the district and
city at a joint meeting,” Blade said.
Supt. Theresa Daem agrees and said that it came to fruition at a
joint district and city meeting. Kinsman and school board president
El Hathaway are being lauded for their fortitude in making the force
happen.
The task force is going on its second year. Parent and co-chair of
the coalition, Theresa O’Hare, likes the support they are receiving.
“What’s great about it, too, is that each athletic program is
supporting it and widely promoting it -- it’s catching on,” O’Hare
said.
She said that people want to know what is going on and they are
taking baby steps to achieve it.
“This year we meet once every quarter,” Blade said. “We have an
agenda.”
Their focus this year was to have a city and parent meeting to
discuss issues. Capt. Danell Adams ran that meeting Dec. 1.
“The last meeting was Feb. 25 and we were reviewing the board
policy for substance abuse,” Blade said. “We’re going to take a
second look at that.”
She thinks the task force is a productive and important entity.
They created a prom brochure for parents, giving them tips for
dialogue with their children and how to address them when they are
facing peer pressure. It talks about things for parents to look for
and ways of communicating.
Blade said that after receiving the results of the Healthy Kids
Survey, school board member Kay Turner did a presentation and helped
the group realize which areas to focus on.
“We shared ideas and came up with the parents guide for the
prevention of substance abuse,” Blade said. “We continue to look at
the voluntary drug testing program at the high school.”
Blade explained that parents have the ability to have their
child/student tested every month or randomly.
“It’s completely confidential and directly mailed to parents, and
no one at the school has access to it except counselor Gretchen
Ernsdorf, she is the only person that knows,” Blade said.
A parent or student can request counseling and it is provided with
complete confidentiality.
Blade could not even comment on the number of students who are on
the drug-testing program because of the strict stipulations.
O’Hare said there is a big problem with alcohol and drugs with
alcohol being the more prevalent problem of the two.
“Sometimes good kids make bad choices,” O’Hare said. “We’re hoping
to show them that there are other things out there.”
She said there are a lot of great kids making good decisions.
“We need to keep communicating, getting it out there in the open,”
O’Hare said.
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