On Friday morning, Sheriff Austin Garrett and the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office School Resource Deputy Unit, in conjunction with the administration of East Hamilton Middle School, hosted a DARE graduation ceremony for students who recently completed the program.
This graduation represents the second academic year DARE has been taught at East Hamilton Middle School since the program was brought back to our community by the HCSO in 2023 after more than two decades. Approximately 70 students graduated this year’s program.
“As part of my vision as Sheriff, I am pleased to see this program now in its second year in our public schools,” said Sheriff Garrett. “My administration understands the value of this safety program and the importance it plays in not only reducing drug addiction in children, but the many other important lessons and values it teaches our young people.
“With the unprecedented number of overdose deaths we are seeing across our state and our nation, along with the increase in juvenile violence, there could not be a more important time to teach the DARE Program in our local schools. We must give our young people the tools they need to educate themselves about the dangers of illegal and prescription drug abuse and avoiding peer pressure by promoting respectful conduct, civility, and behavior.”
DARE was originally founded in 1983 and has proven so successful that it has been implemented in thousands of schools throughout the United States and many other countries. It is a law enforcement led series of classroom lessons that teaches children from kindergarten through 12th grade how to resist peer pressure and live productive drug and violence-free lives. The modern national DARE Program teaches millions of children the skills they need to avoid involvement in drugs and gangs, as well as lead lives free from substance abuse and violence. There is also a mental health component incorporated into the program.
East Hamilton Middle School was one of two schools selected in September of 2022 to serve as pilot locations for the program due to the fact their assigned School Resource Deputies’ proactively requested to undergo the extensive training required to become certified DARE Instructors.
In order to be a DARE Instructor, potential candidates are vetted by DARE mentors responsible for training new law enforcement personnel. The candidate must also be a POST certified, uniformed law enforcement officer with at two or more years of service and must successfully complete a rigorous 80-hour training course conducted by mentors with a significant number of years of classroom experience, as well as university-level educators from colleges of education. This coursework does not include the many additional hours of study and afterhours work required to test for the certification.