Pubdate: Fri, 16 Feb 2001 Source: Watertown Daily Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 Watertown Daily Times Contact: 260 Washington Street, Watertown NY 13601-3364 Fax: (315) 782-1040 Website: http://www.wdt.net Author: Larry Seguin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) DON' T WASTE MONEY; DARE IS INEFFECTIVE The $5,250 that Watertown police wanted for a car for the Drug Abuse Resistance Education Program can be better spent elsewhere. Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson recently denounced DARE as "a fraud on the people of America." Mr. Anderson, who yanked DARE from Salt Lake City schools, complained "For far too long, drug-prevention policies have been driven by mindless adherence to a wasteful, ineffective, feel-good program. DARE has been a huge public-relations success but a failure at accomplishing the goal of long-term drug-abuse prevention." Many independent experts have found that DARE miserably fails students. The federal Bureau of Justice Assistance paid $300,000 to the Research Triangle Institute (RTI), a North Carolina research firm, to analyze DARE's effectiveness. The RTI study found that DARE failed to significantly reduce drug use. Researchers warned that "DARE could be taking the place of other, more beneficial drug-use curricula." Dennis Rosenbaum, professor of criminal justice studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago, surveyed and tracked 1,800 kids who had DARE training and concluded in 1998 that "suburban students who participated in DARE reported significantly higher rates of drug use . . . than suburban students who did not participate in the program." A 1999 study by the California legislative analyst's office "concluded that DARE didn't keep children from using drugs. In fact, it found that suburban kids who took DARE were more likely than others to drink, smoke and take drugs," the Los Angeles Times reported. A 1999 University of Kentucky study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, examined the effect of DARE on students' behavior over the subsequent 10 years. The report concluded "Our results are consistent in documenting the absence of beneficial effects associated with the DARE program. This was true whether the outcome consisted of actual drug use or merely attitudes toward drug use." One Kentucky researcher observed "The only difference was that those who received DARE reported slightly lower levels of self-esteem at age 20." Larry Seguin, Lisbon, N Y - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager