Is your kid doing drugs?

WEBUTUCK — A forum was held on adolescent alcohol and drug use last Tuesday, March 23, at the Webutuck High School cafeteria, for families and communities in crisis. It was sponsored by The Foundation for Community Health, Dutchess County Department of Mental Hygiene and the Dutchess County Youth Bureau. About 50 people, mostly adults, attended the gathering to learn about the issue and how to deal with it if it crosses their path.

“The purpose was to give a snapshot of what’s going on in the community with regard to which drugs are on the rise, how kids are getting them and what the experience is of parents of children who have died of overdoses,� North East Community Center (NECC) Executive Director Jenny Hansell said. “There was a lot of talk about how there are resources available in the community, how there is treatment, how there is counseling in the schools for teens, etc. But it’s a lot harder when you’re in your 20s. There’s not a lot of help around for that age group.�

Hansell said it was also stressed at the forum that parents should not allow a culture in which teenage smoking and drinking is acceptable.

“We talked about how parents often struggle with, ‘What do I say to my kids if I drank and smoke? What moral right do I have to say it’s not OK?’� Hansell said. “They need to know it’s never OK for teens to drink [or use drugs].�

It’s also been proven that prevention models are effective. Even if they take a bit longer to put in place the results are more permanent.

Elaine Trumpetto, executive director of The Council on Addiction Prevention and Education (CAPE) of Dutchess County, said her group, in conjunction with the Eastern Dutchess Coalition, was pleased to sponsor the first in a series of public forums addressing the needs of adolescents.

“CAPE was fortunate to have panelists representing service providers from both sides of the border — Connecticut and New York,� she stated. “The presentation was well received. It is the first step in a process that will bring communities together to address the issue of adolescent use and abuse of alcohol and other substances.�

“It was very eye-opening,� Hansell said. “We always have the idea that it can’t happen to my kid, it’s somebody else’s kid. But if it could happen to her it could happen to me. I got a clear picture of how easy it is to steal pills from grandma’s night stand and sell them for $80 on the street. A lot of people had that reaction.

“I’m a mother, too, and I think about the world my children are about to enter,� she added. “We all want to protect our children. When a community is affected by drugs it hurts everybody, whether it means getting a drunk driver off the road or getting a drug dealer off the street, it’s important we speak out. Personally, I take the view that we all have a responsibility to look out for everybody’s children, not just our own. That’s what society does.�

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