Warsaw Police, Warsaw Community Schools celebrates 30 years of D.A.R.E.

Warsaw Police Department and Warsaw Community Schools are celebrating 30 years of the DARE program. Pictured (L to R) are, front row: Lakeview Middle School Assistant Principal Todd Braddock, LMS Principal Amy Sivley, Warsaw Police officer Joel Beam, WPD officer Roy Navarro, Warsaw Community Schools Chief Academic Officer David Robertson; back row: WPD Chief Scott Whitaker, WCS Superintendent Dr. David Hoffert, WPD officer Brandon Zartman, WPD officer Greg Oberlin, Edgewood Middle School Principal JoElla Hauselman and EMS Assistant Principal Jason Culver. Photo by David Slone, Times-Union.

The Warsaw Police Department DARE program is celebrating a major milestone.

The program was first implemented in Warsaw Community Schools on Sept. 5, 1988, by then Chief Craig Allebach, after learning about the program at an International Chief’s Association Meeting.

The program originally launched in 1983 as a partnership between the Los Angeles Police Department and the Los Angeles Unified School District. Unlike all other drug prevention curriculum, LAPD police officers were trained to teach the DARE curriculum, thereby putting a local “human face” on drug prevention in schools, according to a news release from the WPD.

In 1983, virtually no classroom teachers were receiving instruction in their college courses about drug use/abuse or any instruction on how to deliver drug prevention lessons. Increasing awareness of DARE and LAPD officers training other “local” law enforcement officers to deliver the original DARE curriculum resulted in the rapid and widespread adoption of the program throughout the country, the release states.

Since the inception, 10 WPD officers have been trained and assigned to DARE, including current officers Roy Navarro and Allen Danko.

Officers within the program must undergo a selection process and attend two weeks of training before being certified. The curriculum, which is scientifically based, is the national symbol for the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program which, in partnership with police officers, parents and schools, is in use throughout the country. The DARE program has evolved nationally, conducting training for new DARE officers annually.

The partnership between the WPD and Warsaw Community Schools has been key to the success of the program. WCS Superintendent Dr. David Hoffert, a former DARE graduate, said, “It’s about partnership and our administration seeing the importance of the program.”

The program has been offered to all WCS sixth-grade students offering lessons in decision making skills for a healthy life over the past 30 years. Since the inception of WPD’s program, many changes have occurred in terms of both curriculum and graduation practices. All graduations are now held at the Grace College Manahan Orthopaedic Capital Center.

WPD and WCS congratulate Navarro for being nominated by his peers and selected by the Indiana Training Team to serve as a DARE mentor and trainer.