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Page 10 THE VILLADOM TIMES II & IV • November 20, 2013
Local police chiefs host
drug awareness program
by John Koster
Wyckoff Police Chief Benjamin Fox,
Franklin Lakes Police Chief Joseph Selten-
rich, and Oakland Police Chief Edward
Kasper have teamed up to present a drug
awareness program to parents from the
FLOW area on Tuesday, Nov. 19. The pro-
gram will be held at 7 p.m. at Indian Hills
High School, 97 Yawpo Avenue in Oakland.
The community is invited.
The chiefs’ informative program will
assist parents in understanding how severe
the use of heroin and prescription pain
killer drugs is in the FLOW community.
Parents will learn how quickly a child can
become addicted to prescription pain kill-
ers, and then move on to heroin, a cheaper
alternative. “Parents will learn how their child can
quickly become addicted to prescription
pain killers, and then move on to heroin use
because of the cost of the pills,” Chief Fox
said last week. “While the situation is not
unique to Franklin Lakes, Oakland, and
Wyckoff, it’s here. Many of our children are
addicted and parents need to know what to
watch for to protect their children.”
A drug expert from the Bergen County
Prosecutors Office will provide be on hand
to discuss how teens who are addicted will
do anything to get drugs.
“Parents will hear (the expert) say how
teenagers who get addicted to these drugs
will do anything to get drugs,” Chief Fox
said. “When he says anything, he means
it.” In recent months, a number of teens and
people in their early 20s have been arrested
for pain killers and heroin -- a drug that has
become more widely used in recent years.
“We did some research for the Munici-
pal Alliance about drug arrests over the
past 10 years and over the last three or four
years the increase in heroin arrests has been
just staggering,” Chief Fox told Villadom
TIMES. “It went from the point where 10
years ago we never saw heroin to the point
where heroin now accounts for the majority
of drug arrests.”
Towns outside the Wyckoff, Franklin
Lakes, and Oakland nexus have had simi-
lar issues. In Glen Rock, a student at Glen
Rock High School was recently arrested
for his second attempt to sell heroin to an
undercover officer. Students in a number of
schools say heroin is readily available and
relatively cheap.
“Don’t be a parent who puts his or her
head in the sand and says ‘Not my child,’”
Chief Fox added. “Way too many parents
of teenagers who are deeply involved in
this problem have said ‘I never would have
believed that my child would get messed up
with this.’ Locally, we have had students
with straight A grades and scholarships
dealing with addiction. It is destroying
lives.”