Fearful council kills DARE
Paul Clinton
City Council members finally cut the funding thread to the Drug
Abuse Resistance Education program, which is popular but also has
raised questions about how effectively it kept children from using
drugs.
On a 4-3 vote, the council eliminated DARE on Monday, two months
after halving the amount provided to send two police officers into
local schools to preach the negative effects of drugs and violence.
Huntington Beach Police Chief Kenneth Small recommended the move,
saying his department needed the two officers on patrol.
“It’s not that we don’t support the program,” Small said. “We just
don’t have the money [to fund it].”
After three newly elected members mounted an effort to postpone a
decision whether to kill the program and allow supporters to raise
private funding to keep it alive, a majority of council members
elected to pull the plug on DARE.
The city has had the drug-prevention program since 1983.
“We need to vote tonight and give some people some direction,”
Councilwoman Debbie Cook said.
Mayor Connie Boardman, Councilwoman Pam Julien Houchen and
Councilwoman Jill Hardy joined Cook in support of the move.
Councilman Gil Coerper, a retired Huntington Beach police officer,
led the charge to save the program.
“I think it’s the most important thing we can do for our
children,” Coerper said about DARE. “I would do anything in my power
to make sure that it continues.”
Coerper proposed bringing back the item at the council’s next
meeting, on Jan. 6, an idea that died on the wrong end of a 4-3 vote.
In September, the council scaled back DARE, cutting it from an
18-week program to a 9-week program. The program will end early next
year.
Small said the program would cost the department $77,320 for the
spring semester.
During the public comment period of the council meeting, a handful
of speakers criticized the program as ineffectual.
Resident Norm Westwell said the program has failed to effectively
keep children away from drugs.
“I do not advocate drug use,” Westwell said. “[But DARE] is just
as effective as if we did nothing at all.”
Edison High School senior Hillary LeBail spoke in favor of the
program. LeBail, 17, is a member of the city’s Children’s Task Force,
an advisory panel.
“You could really lose the opportunity to help some children,” she
said of canceling the program. “If it helps one child to not do
drugs, it’s a success.”
A coalition operating under the name Substance Abuse and Violence
Education, or SAVE, has fought for the program. Shirley Carey, a SAVE
member and Huntington Beach City School District trustee, said she
hoped to raise as much as $35,000 by February to resuscitate DARE.
Carey said the group is still weighing whether to apply for
federal or state grants. She also acknowledged she has a long road
ahead.
“I’m very disappointed [by the decision to eliminate DARE], Carey
said. “I think it’s going to be very hard to fund a program that has
been officially discontinued.”
* PAUL CLINTON is a reporter with Times Community News. He
covers City Hall. He may be reached at (714) 965-7173 or by e-mail at
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