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Nebraska Youth Congress to focus on meth

While a lot is said and written about methamphetamine, there's a fair degree of ignorance about the drug, it's effects and it's prevalence among youth in Grand Island, Nebraska.

The 12th annual Grand Island Youth Congress is designed to help change that this year.

The congress, which is sponsored by the Central Nebraska Council on Alcoholism, will take place Monday at Grand Island City Hall. High school youth who show promise in leadership development have been selected to attend, with the hopes of educating those younger, and older than them.

"The idea is that youth leaders who are present will be in a better position to talk about the situation to local middle schoolers and to adults," Collette Shaughnessy, prevention education coordinator with CNCA, said. "Their job is to help educate others about what they see."

So how prevalent is methamphetamine in the high school and other youth populations?

That, of course, is hard to nail down. Chris Eberhardt, director of alternative education at Northwest High School, said, like many other drugs, the situation is more of a creeping prevalence than an explosion of use.

"Am I seeing more and more kids using it? Who isn't?" Eberhardt said. "Kids know it's out there. It slowly filters in. You might not suspect it as the first drugs kids are using, but it's starting to show up more and more."

The congress will include several events on Monday, including a panel discussion featuring community members who deal with the methamphetamine problem, project planning by the congress and a presentation by Nebraska Officer Chuck Matson, a Drug Recognition Expert from the Omaha, Nebraska Police Department.

Shaughnessy said the congress has taken on drug issues before, along with other issues that come with being a teen, but this one is interesting to her because she has no idea what to expect from it.

The reason the topic was chosen, she said, because it's an issue children are dealing with.

"It will be interesting to see their response," she said. "I think it's more of an issue than is normally discussed. We want to hear from them and listen to what they see the problems as being. That's what this is all about."

Since the Youth Congress consists of those who "show great promise" when it comes to leadership, will those involved on Monday give an accurate picture of the pressures young people face when it comes the methamphetamine?

Shaughnessy said she's not sure, but whatever they have to say on the subject will be taken into account.

"It's a chance for them to talk and us to listen," she said. "I think it doesn't matter what they tell us. Even if they don't know, they'll leave us with a deeper understanding of the issue because of their perspective."

The congress will also include activities to help youth better understand the nature of chemical dependency, and possibly create empathy for those who have an addiction.

Eberhardt said that might be one of the more valuable exercises of the event, because it's a lesson future leaders can take with them concerning drug addiction.

"People seem to think you can just quit and it's that simple," Eberhardt said. "This will be a good hard look using something they can relate to. If they have a better understanding and take that understanding into the community, we'll be better because of it."

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