EDITORIAL
Educating our youth about the dangers of controlled substances is the No.
1 goal this year in the national fight against drug and alcohol abuse. As
part of Red Ribbon Week, it is our job to do the same at home.
Like many districts across the country, the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District unfortunately has to deal with drug and alcohol problems among
its teenage students. School officials acknowledge that during many
weekends throughout the year there are parties where underage students
get access to alcohol and drugs.
Making the problem worse are the scores of parents who leave their homes
empty on weekends so these parties can flourish. One principal rightly
called their action “benign neglect.”
While this is not the norm in the district -- many parents are fighting
the good fight -- Red Ribbon Week should be a time where parents examine
their children’s access to drugs, and it should spark a change -- however
small. Even if one family sits down to really talk about the problem and
therefore prevents one child from experimenting with drugs at an early
age, the Red Ribbon campaign will have served its purpose.
Judy Davis, a Newport Beach mother who lost her 21-year-old son to a
heroine overdose, will join Daniel Headrick from Hoag Hospital’s Chemical
Dependency Unit this week to deliver their educational message to Corona
del Mar High School eighth-graders. At first glance, their target
audience may seem too young. But experts believe students first begin
experimenting with drugs in the seventh and eighth grades.
Red Ribbon Week’s focus should not only be on the nationwide scourges of
heroin, methamphetamine and alcohol. District officials have also
recently acknowledged the use of Ritalin -- the drug widely prescribed to
children with attention deficit disorder -- among Corona del Mar High
School students as a weight-loss agent. This week’s awareness campaign
should not neglect that increasingly popular and very dangerous problem.
The only downside of Red Ribbon Week is that it ends Friday when the last
school bell rings. Rather than settle for one week, everyone -- schools,
parents and students -- should strive to make a permanent commitment to
fighting this problem.
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