Red Ribbon Week to focus on drug abuse
Amy R. Spurgeon
NEWPORT-MESA -- As the school district’s Red Ribbon Week begins today,
one Newport Beach mother is hoping her son’s story will stop others from
making the same mistakes he did.
“I cope because I know he is free from this,” Judy Davis said. “But I
still cry every day.”
An honor student and award winning artist, Robert “Bobby” Davis was 21
when he was found dead, apparently of a heroin overdose, by his fiancee
in the home they shared in Southern California. Drug paraphernalia was
later found hidden in the home.
Since his death, Davis has made it her mission to educate others about
the reality of drug abuse. Red Ribbon Week, promoting anti-drug messages
and programs at schools across the country, gives her the perfect stage.
She and the medical director of Hoag’s Chemical Dependency Unit, Dr.
Daniel Headrick, will speak to Corona del Mar eighth-graders about
chemical dependency Thursday and Friday.
The school is the first in the district to have Davis share her personal
tragedy with the goal of helping others.”Serious drug experimentation
begins in seventh, eighth and ninth grades,” said Don Martin, the
principal of Corona del Mar High School and Middle School. “It is a good
time to catch them early.”
Martin acknowledged the prevalence of high school parties throughout the
district. It is at these parties where youths have access to drugs and
alcohol, he said.
Martin also said there are parents in the district who supply youths with
alcohol and practice “benign neglect” by frequently leaving homes empty
on weekends and available for teenage parties.
Still, he stressed, they are not the norm.
“There are a lot of parents who are fighting the fight,” he said.
Davis and Headrick will spend hourlong sessions in English classes
raising drug-abuse awareness among students. An informational packet
regarding chemical dependency will be issued during the presentation with
the intent of striking up discussions at home.
The 1999 National Drug Control Strategy issued to Congressby the White
House lists youth education as the top goal in the fight against drug and
alcohol abuse.
“If children reach adulthood without using illegal drugs, alcohol or
tobacco, they are unlikely to develop a chemical dependency problems,”
Barry McCaffrey, the director of the Office of the National Drug Control
Policy, wrote when issuing the strategy. “To this end, the strategy seeks
to involve parents, coaches, mentors, teachers, clergy and other role
models in a broad prevention campaign.”
The United States has produced an annual drug control strategy since
1989.
Red Ribbon Week officially concludes Friday with the sounding of the last
school bell. However, many feel a longer commitment should be made
between schools, parents and students.
“I hate the fact that it is only one week,” Davis said. “Red Ribbon Week
should be all year.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.