Curfew for Youth

The Janesville Police Department would like to remind you of the curfew for youth. The curfew went into effect in February 2004 and is enforced by the Janesville Police Department. Sunday - Thursday nights youth under the age of seventeen may not be public from 11pm-5am. On Fridays and Saturday nights, the curfew is from midnight- 5am. For more information about the curfew, please contact the Police Department at 755-3055.

 

Wisconsin dangerous for driving teens


Wisconsin ranks high for teenage driving deaths. A report out this week from a pair of physician's groups lists Wisconsin as the fourth deadliest state for teen traffic fatalities. Rock County Sheriff's Sergeant Brian Aubrey says the reasons typically include speeding, drinking, and lack of seat belt use. Couple this with lack of practical experience, and you have a potentially deadly combination. Aubrey says the sheriff has worked to be proactive on the issue, sending Aubrey to speak at high schools before the prom. Aubrey also likes the idea of the graduated drivers license limiting the number of teens in the car. He says teens are easily caught up in the excitement and get distracted from their driving. Aubrey also encourages parents to get involved and simply talk to their kids about choices, safe behavior, and consequences.

http://www.dmv.org/wi-wisconsin/safety-&-statistics.php  

 DMV Website- Please look over with your new driver.

 

 

Tips for Parents regarding Drugs and you Children

Talking dope to your kids: Tell it like it was

By FRANK SCHULTZ ( Contact ) Friday, Nov. 9, 2007

EMAIL COMMENTS PRINT

JANESVILLE — So you inhaled when you were in college. Maybe you enjoyed yourself immensely. Wouldn’t trade those days for anything.

But now your child is 10 or 13 and wants to know: Did you smoke dope, mommy?

What’s a parent to do?

Tell the truth, said Kate Baldwin of Partners in Prevention of Rock County.

Tell the truth, said Carrie Kulinski, the Janesville School District’s drug/alcohol coordinators and a longtime drug abuse counselor.

Tell the truth, said Ben Masel, perhaps the most famous marijuana user in Wisconsin, known for organizing an annual marijuana festival.

But what truth?

“You should tell them that you’ve learned your lesson,” Baldwin counseled. “Just because it was OK for you, it doesn’t mean it’s OK for them.”

For one thing, dope is a different drug these days. It’s so much stronger, Baldwin and Kulinski said.

Masel said marijuana’s potency always has varied, but he said the solution to that objection is simple: Use less to get the same high. There’s even a side benefit: Less smoke means less of the harmful substances taken into the lungs.

Yes, even Masel agrees that marijuana smoke is harmful. But it doesn’t have to be smoked, he noted.

Kulinski counters that it’s not just lung damage. Research into brain scans of teenagers shows decreased energy in the frontal lobes of regular teen users, she said. Regular use is defined as three or more times a week.

The scans were taken 30 days after the last time the person used marijuana, so the brain scans are showing the damage is long lasting, Kulinski said. One result might be a lessened ability to perform well on a test, she suggested.

Masel said he wouldn’t go on record as advocating teenage marijuana use, but “the reality is, it’s something kids are going to do, and no amount of sanctimoniousness or warnings is going to stop it.”

So the best thing to do is teach your children how to go about it safely—health wise and legal-wise, Masel suggested.

Oh, so wrong, Kulinski said.

For one thing, studies have shown that kids actually listen to their parents about drugs, Kulinski said.

For another thing, most teens don’t do dope. The percentage of 12th-graders who had ever used marijuana has been dropping nationwide, Kulinski said.

Locally, a 2006 Janesville School District survey showed just 37 percent of 12th-graders had used marijuana at least once in the previous year. That’s down from a high of 48 percent in 2002.

Suggesting that kids will try it sends the wrong message, Kulinski said.

“It’s not inevitable that all kids are going to use marijuana. In fact, most kids do not, and I think we need to reinforce that,” Kulinski said.

Even Safety First, an offshoot of the pro-legalization group Drug Policy Alliance, agrees that parents need to tell the truth about themselves as they warn their children.

“While you do not need to rehash every detail, it can be very helpful to share your own experiences with your teen because it makes you a more credible confidant,” the Safety First booklet states. “… Teenagers have a knack for seeing through adults’ evasions, half-truths and hypocrisy.”

Kulinski, who spent a year of research for an anti-marijuana course she created, has seen the conflicting information about marijuana. She said she chose to believe the research, which convinced her that we now know more than ever. For her, there’s no doubt marijuana is more harmful than was assumed in the past.

Kulinski just finished teaching her course to another group of teens, and although many of them seemed resistant to her message, her post-test showed that more of them were considering halting their marijuana use.

But Kulinski said her message would pack a bigger punch if kids also heard it from their parents.

Test kits available

One way to talk to your kids about drugs is to tell them your rules and announce you’re going to test them for compliance.

The Janesville School District continues to offer vouchers from TestMyTeen.com for home test kits. The district got the vouchers last spring.

So far, very few parents have asked for the vouchers, said Carrie Kulinski, coordinator of alcohol, tobacco and other drugs programming for the district.

The only cost for the kits is $6 for shipping.

The kits test for marijuana, cocaine, ecstasy, amphetamines, oxycodone, propoxyphene, barbiturates, benzodiazepines and opiates such as codeine, morphine and heroin.

The voucher kits are for one-time use, but parents can buy more online for $18.99 plus shipping.

Advocates say the kits give students a reason to “just say no” to peer pressure.

Critics have said such kits can undermine the parent-child relationship and that professional help would be more effective if a parent thinks his child is using drugs.

But the kits come with instructions on how to institute a program, which includes communication about acceptable behavior, rewards for compliance and punishments if the child tests positive.

Janesville parents who want a test kit can contact the assistant principals’ offices at Craig or Parker high schools or Kulinski at (608) 743-5087

Advice for parents

Both sides of the marijuana debate agree that kids should abstain from drugs. Both sides agree parents should educate themselves about marijuana and talk to their kids about it.

The two sides disagree about the facts, but even the would-be legalizers agree marijuana use is risky, both medically and legally.

Two good sources on the opposing philosophies, with advice for how to talk to your children can be found at:

-- Abstain: www.theantidrug.com. Click on the “Advice” tab at the top of the page.

-- Abstain, but…: www.safety1st.org.

 

Crime Prevention Tips from the Police Department: Tips Regarding Strangers


The Police Department is asking parents to talk with their children about strangers, including what a stranger is and what a child should do if he or she is approached by a stranger.

What is a Stranger?
A stranger is a person whom you have never met. You may have seen the person before but don’t know anything about him or her. Most strangers are nice, but some are not. You can't tell if a stranger is nice or not by looking; however, you can tell if a situation is good or bad.

Tips About Strangers
• Encourage your children to be aware of dangerous situations. Let them know that if a stranger asks for help or to keep a "special secret" it could be dangerous. Tell them to say no and tell a trusted adult or call 911.
• Encourage your children to trust their instincts. If they are scared or uncomfortable, tell them to get away by making an excuse or running to a safe place.
• Have them check with you before going with an adult.
• Tell your children not to accept gifts or a ride from someone they do not know.
• Have your children stick close by their friends. Children will be safer if they play in a group.

For questions, please contact Sergeant Brian Donohoue at 755-3133.

 

 

                                                                                     School Safety Reminders
As the school year begins, everyone can benefit from a reminder on how to keep children safe as they go to and from school. Adult crossing guards and school safety patrols work to get children safely across the street. Please work with the guards and safety patrols and be on the lookout for children crossing. Speed can be a problem in school zones. Drivers should slow down and be alert in the 15 miles per hour school zones. Within the 15 miles per hour school zones, drivers should not be driving any faster than 15 miles per hour when school children are present.

Pick up and drop off at school can also be a point of confusion. Parents should never stop in the middle of a traffic lane to let their children enter or leave their vehicle or motion for their children to run across the street. Parents should also be aware of the following parking regulations. There is no parking within the following areas:
• Within 15 feet of an intersection or crosswalk.
• Within 4 feet of a driveway.
• Within 5 feet of a curbside mailbox.
• Where the curbs are painted yellow.
• Where a sign designates “no parking”.
• No parking in school parking lots unless authorized to do so.
• No driving into school parking lots to drop off or pick up children.
• No parking, stopping or standing if a sign is posted.
• During school hours, no parking, stopping or standing on the near side of a through street next to an elementary or middle school.

Children need to think about safety too. Children walking or riding bikes to and from school need to make safety a priority. Children should be walked to school the first few days to make sure they are comfortable going by themselves. Safe walk routes are found in each school’s handbook. Children should plan to use the same route to and from school each day so parents can easily find them if the need arises. Also, children should be taught to cross the street only at intersections and crosswalks and to utilize crossing guards and school safety patrols when they are available. For additional information about school safety, please call Sergeant Donohoue, of the Janesville Police Department, at 755-3100