Call & Times

Old school

- By JESSICA CONTRERA

Amid increased opioid use and the legalizati­on of marijuana, DARE still goes old school to get its message out.

WEST BRIDGEWATE­R, Mass. — The class had covered bullying, internet safety and good decision-making, and by February, Officer Thaxter could see that the sixth-graders were ready. The morning bell rang. The 11and 12-year-olds scooted their chairs closer to their desks, looking up at a dry-erase board where their teacher had written the agenda for the day: “D.A.R.E.”

The lights went off, and the projector went on.

“Today,” Officer Thaxter said, “we’re going to talk about marijuana.”

For 16 years, every elementary school student in this small town in Massachuse­tts has learned about drugs from Kenneth Thaxter. But this year, his lesson needed to change, and he was about to find out whether the students knew why.

“What do you know about marijuana?” he asked.

“It’s a drug,” said a boy named Jack.

“There are different names for it,” said Cassidy.

“There is medical and legal,” said Luke.

“It could actually save your life,” said Chelsea.

“OK, very good,” Thaxter said, and he began to explain.

Massachuse­tts had become one of eight states to legalize recreation­al marijuana, and in just a few months, anyone over 21 would be able to purchase it at dispensari­es nearby. This, he thought, was a confusing message to send to kids. They’d grown up knowing that drugs are bad. Now they were hearing from older siblings and maybe even their parents that weed is just a plant, and plants are good. It was up to Thaxter to convince them not to try it.

“People get high. That’s the reason people like to smoke, because they get a feeling of euphoria. That is what is reported to me - I don’t smoke,” he told the class. “But there’s also a bunch of other shortterm effects.”

He pointed to a list on the screen. Difficulty concentrat­ing. Trouble problem-solving. Loss of coordinati­on and motor skills.

“You would get bad grades,” said a student named James.

“Very good,” Thaxter said. “You guys know Mrs. Wenzel’s science class is no joke. If you’re not paying attention, you’re going to miss out.”

It was exactly the kind of lesson that DARE has officially distanced itself from. The police-run program on “Drug Abuse Resistance Education” was seemingly everywhere in the 1980s and ‘90s. Then multiple studies showed that it did nothing to stop kids from doing drugs. In the 2000s, states slashed it from their budgets. It revamped its curriculum to focus less on drugs and more on smart decision-making. Still, it’s a shadow of its former self. In Massachuse­tts, which once had 800 DARE officers, 140 remain, including the one now asking his students: “Who likes roller coasters?”

Hands shot up around the room.

“You get up to the top, right before you go over the edge, that’s your body creating endorphins,” Thaxter said. “If you are using drugs to create endorphins, rather than doing it naturally, it’s very dangerous.”

He clicked to a slide titled, “What is addiction?”

And here was the core of his job. Was he going to persuade the kids to never smoke weed? To “Just Say No” forever? Unlikely. But there was a far bigger drug problem outside these walls that he was hopeful – desperate, really – to do something about.

“When your body needs and craves a drug, and doesn’t get the drug, you become sick,” he explained.

Chelsea raised her hand. “Like if you use too much pills, you can overdose?”

“Yes,” Thaxter said. Prescripti­on pills had started the problem. Then it was heroin and fentanyl and carfentani­l, the opioids that killed 1,997 people in Massachuse­tts last year, some of them here in West Bridgewate­r. Overdoses had become an expected part of Thaxter’s shifts as a patrol officer. His colleagues had responded to one just the night before. In the next 48 hours, there would be two more.

Another hand went up. He always encouraged the students to share stories, as long as they said “someone I know” instead of the person’s name. This student wanted to tell the class how someone she knew had stolen money to pay for drugs.

“Yes, people become desperate,” Thaxter said. “That’s what addiction looks like.”

“Someone I know, he overdosed and he killed himself,” the next sixth-grader said. Her dad had told her that his best friend was now gone. She kept that part to herself.

“I know someone, and he did drugs and stuff, and now he is homeless,” said another. Her parents had told her that she just wouldn’t be seeing her uncle anymore.

Thaxter nodded as he listened, saying “OK,” and “Wow,” and “That is hard.” His job was to ensure that none of these preteens would ever become like the “someone” they knew. He didn’t actually think that they would be trying heroin any time soon. But marijuana, maybe. If a kid was willing to try weed in the sixth grade, Thaxter wondered, what would he be doing at 19 or 20?

“Drugs have touched all of us. Everybody here could probably raise a hand,” he said, trying to get the students back on track. “So, here’s the thing. The teen brain is under constructi­on.”

He remembers the first overdose he responded to with Narcan, the nasal spray hailed as a lifesaving antidote to opioid overdoses. It was five years ago, when rampant abuse of the drugs still felt like something that happened in big cities, not “little bedroom communitie­s,” as Thaxter called this one. The woman lying unconsciou­s at his feet was a respected health-care provider at the local hospital.

“What happened?” he remembers her asking when she was revived.

“Hon,” he said, “you overdosed.”

Now every police cruiser and firetruck in town is equipped with Narcan, and soon it will be in all the schools. That’s how a drug epidemic feels in West Bridgewate­r, population 7,000. It isn’t junkies on the side of the road, or skyrocketi­ng crime – but if you know where to look, it’s everywhere.

When Thaxter arrives at the police station in the mornings, there are fewer shoes lined up outside the cells – a sign not that fewer people have been arrested, but that the officers have taken them straight to the hospital, afraid that they will overdose.

His colleagues come back from their days off with stories of trying to go about their lives – getting gas, picking up their dry cleaning – when they glance into the cars in the parking lot and realize that they need to rescue someone.

Thaxter has made a habit of reading the obituary pages, looking for young faces.

“It almost looks like we’re at war,” he says. “I don’t ever remember seeing so many obituaries for people in their 20s. The picture, you can tell, they’re totally healthy and vibrant, and then it will say, ‘Died suddenly at home.’”

He calls his 21- and 26-year-old sons, who live in New York and California. “Someone from your class,” he’ll tell them.

When one of his former students overdoses, he visits Schools Superinten­dent Patty Oakley. “Guess who,” he’ll say.

“Ninety-nine percent of the time, they were really successful kids in school and had a bright future,” Oakley says. Some are buried near her husband, who died a few years ago at 50. That no longer seems to her to be a young age to go.

Now her schools are filled with people trying to make sure that others don’t end up in that place. The teachers who know to look out for parents who might be high when they pick up their kids. The counselors who listen to students say, “My dad was in the bathroom for a long time and then the police came,” or the hardest thing to hear: “My mom says if I talk to you they are going to take me away from her.”

“You want to blame something, blame MTV,” the president of Massachuse­tts DARE told a Boston Herald reporter in 1997. The country was in the middle of a contentiou­s debate over its bestknown drug-reduction effort. Study after public health study had concluded that DARE did not decrease drug use among students, and may have even increased it. Politician­s and police argued that the program’s benefits, such as familiariz­ing students with law enforcemen­t, couldn’t be quantified.

The Herald reporter went to a Massachuse­tts high school to ask students what they thought. The article began with a cigarette-smoking teen named Jessica, who still had the T-shirt she’d received when she graduated from DARE in elementary school – but she had altered it so the letters now stood for “Drugs Are Really Exciting.”

By 2002, Massachuse­tts had eliminated $4.3 million in funding for the program. That same year, the West Bridgewate­r chief of police called Ken Thaxter into his office and said, “You have kids, right?” and with that, he became the town’s DARE officer.

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 ?? Jamie Cotten/For The Washington Post ?? Ken Thaxter talks to a sixth-grade class at Howard Elementary School about the perils of drug use.
Jamie Cotten/For The Washington Post Ken Thaxter talks to a sixth-grade class at Howard Elementary School about the perils of drug use.

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