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Police Can't Staff DARE at Current Force Levels

For a second straight year, Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or DARE, will not be taught in Fair Lawn Schools.

 

Due to a dearth of police staffing, the DARE program will not be taught at Fair Lawn schools for the second straight year.

DARE, which stands for Drug Abuse Resistance Education, is a global initiative that sends police officers into schools to teach kids first-hand the dangers of drugs and alcohol.

DARE had been a mainstay of a Fair Lawn education for 20 years before the program was eliminated last year because of an understaffed police force that couldn’t afford to both teach the program and maintain classic law enforcement duties, Chief Erik Rose said.

“The decision to eliminate DARE was one of the most difficult I’ve ever made,” he said. “But we must focus on core police services…I can’t sit and say we’ll have DARE but no police to respond to a call.”

A state police study that used staffing data from late 2009, found that Fair Lawn’s police force was understaffed in comparison to other police departments in Bergen County and across the state.

Since the study was conducted, layoffs and retirements have reduced the police staff even further. Fair Lawn currently has 54 officers, down from 64 at the time of the study.

Of the 54 officers currently on staff, three are on long-term disability, and a fourth is out temporarily with an injury, leaving the effective police force at 50 officers.

Rose said he wouldn’t feel comfortable resuming the DARE program until the police staff had an effective force of at least 58 officers, which due to the ebb and flow of injuries that officers inevitably face, means more like a total force of about 60 officers.

Earlier this year, council approved the hiring of two more officers that would bring the total police force to 56. Rose, who is currently interviewing to fill those positions, said he applauded council for its decision to increase the force, but didn't feel comfortable resuming the program quite yet.

"I don’t want to commit to DARE unless we think we can keep it up and complete the program," he said.

Even without police officers to teach it, Fair Lawn schools have continued components of the DARE program, Rose said. But without officers in the schools, the program fails to serve one of its essential functions: fostering relationships between the police and the community.

“The principal of DARE is to have the officers, active duty, in uniform, in the school with kids,” he said. “Not just teaching, but interacting, developing a rapport or a bond with students that carries over after the school day ends and even after DARE for that child ends."

Det. David Boone, who taught DARE in Fair Lawn schools for many years, said it had  a “tremendous” impact on kids because it allowed them to build a personal connection with police officers from an early age that extended through their teenage years.

When kids know police officers and view them as individuals rather than as a collective force, it reduces their fear and apprehension about law enforcement, Boone said.

He called the educational trifecta of school, police and parents, “the only way we win with kids.”

The DARE program started at St. Anne school in 1989, and quickly spread to the rest of the Fair Lawn School District the following year.

DARE offered a 45-minute class for students from kindergarten through eighth grade, once a week for up to 10 weeks, depending on the grade. Class lessons included peer pressure, self-esteem, drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, cyber bullying and a gang component, Boone said.

Related Topics: DARE Fair Lawn, Fair Lawn Police Department, david boone fair lawn police, detective david boone, fair lawn borough council, fair lawn police chief erik rose, fair lawn police understaffed, fair lawn school district, and nj police departments

iDAREyou

2:09 pm on Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Terrible, this decision to layoff officers will no doubt have a long lasting effect on the community.

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BellairBerdan

2:38 pm on Wednesday, October 5, 2011

That's a shame. Desperate times bring desperate people. Laying off our officers at this time is penny wise and pound foolish and makes us all less safe. The people laid off will collect unemployment, which we still pay for, and we get no benefit of the service they provided.

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FleecedAmerica

8:06 am on Thursday, October 6, 2011

Police and boro employees reduced while local politicians increased their wallets at the county level... Great job Fair Lawn, you voted for theses hoodlums!

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RadburnBpark

1:39 pm on Thursday, October 6, 2011

I have to say i was in Fair Lawn schools from k-12, when the Dare program was still there and its not an affective program, It used to teach about alcohol that was what the A stood for but they dropped that because it was not working so well. Secondly kids who want to try drugs are going to try them with or without a Dare program. The best way children can learn to stay away from drugs is from there parents, siblings and other family members. While i don't like the idea of an understaffed police department i really do not see the Dare program as a good use of officers and resources so to me that wont be missed.

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Just Facts

10:53 am on Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Hey BPark - Talk to one parent who lost a child to drugs and you might just change your tune...... DARE is effective, and it brings positive role models to the school.....With your attitude we should just hand out drivers licenses to all people....because they are gonna crash anyway.....Good for kids to learn from people who deal with this stuff- reinforce what they get or might not get at home......

Russell Hauptman

1:02 pm on Saturday, April 21, 2012

I personally agree that DARE doesn't work in its intended role. That is children are not going to suddenly not want to experiment with drugs. I had DARE and did my fair share like everyone else I knew later in High School. HOWEVER the thing it does great is foster community relationship with the PD. I remember brand new police officer Joseph Cook coming to our classes to teach DARE. It helped the kids not be afraid of the police, and it helped the police get to know the kids. Even though I don't think it will stop a single kid from putting that first joint to their lips, I still think it's a fantastic program that should be reinstated so that my child will one day get to experience it assuming we stay in Fair Lawn.

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