Pubdate: May 7, 1998 Source: The Daily Record (Morris County, NJ) Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.com/ Author: Stanton Peele DANGLER'S DRUG APPROACH IS A FAILURE My ten-year-old daughter recently returned home with a forbidding looking document from the Morris County Prosecutor, John Dangler. It reported that "40-55 percent of all of the high school seniors throughout Morris County are regularly using alcohol and/or drugs" and that, "in 1997, 21 Morris County residents died as a result of fatal overdoses of drugs," a number of them teenagers. In response to this cascading dug and alcohol use, the Prosecutor reviewed New Jersey laws that penalize adults for serving alcohol to children in their homes; requiring parents to report to police any drugs they find in their homes or cars; forfeiture of property by parents if they knew their children were using drugs on their property; etc. However, all of these laws were in place prior to the 1997 data on drug overdoses and high school senior drug and alcohol use. Moreover, we have been hearing for some time about the great success of D.A.R.E., the drug prevention program administered by the police in our schools. If the laws and programs are so effective, then why are the results so bad? Without questioning this, the Prosecutor and others will push for still sterner laws, more arrests, and more scare programs about the dangers of drugs. It would seem that we have gone as far as we can with zero-tolerance, arrest and confiscate, scare tactics with drugs. Yet we are addicted to such approaches. The more drug use by teens, the more we resort to the unsuccessful policies that led to such drug use. Stanton Peele Morris Township - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake