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New River Notebook

H1N1 flu vaccinations begin at New River Valley schools

Vaccinations begin Wednesday for lower grades at five schools in the New River Health District — two elementary schools in Floyd County, two elementary/middle schools in Giles County and one elementary school in Montgomery County.

Reporter Duncan Adams has more on this story.

Radford University Faculty Senate may take up no-confidence motion

The Radford University faculty senate may soon consider a motion expressing no confidence in the academic leadership of Provost Wil Stanton.

Reporter Tonia Moxley has more on this story.

Sheriff's deputy named state's top DARE officer

Shawna Morrison

SHAWSVILLE — When Master Deputy Chris Lucas  asked a Shawsville Elementary School  class  what they had learned during their first day of the DARE program, hands flew up.

“Don’t smoke.”

“Don’t chew tobacco.”

“Don’t be drunk.”

“How to make good decisions.”

In one day, the fifth-graders had already learned the gist of much of what Lucas was going to spend the next nine weeks teaching.

Lucas — who taught DARE at Price’s Fork Elementary School  for 10 years before adding Shawsville, Elliston-Lafayette and Belview  elementary schools this year — is good at connecting with children.

It’s part of what earned him the Mike Bentowski  DARE Officer of the Year Award from the Virginia DARE Officers Association  in July.

“I was pretty flattered,” Lucas said. “There’s a lot of folks who are probably more deserving than I am.”

Lucas, who works for the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, tries hard to drive home to fifth-graders the dangers of tobacco, alcohol and marijuana use and how to resist peer pressure.

At the same time, he manages to become their buddy.

He gives them high-fives. He gets down on his knees to talk to them. He eats lunch and plays kickball with them.

In the letter she wrote to nominate Lucas for the Officer of the Year award, Jenna Swann, a fifth-grade teacher at Price’s Fork Elementary, wrote, “I believe in the lessons taught, but no matter how great the lessons are, they cannot reach troubled children or make a difference in all of our children’s lives unless the DARE officer teaching them inspires, motivates, and excites.

“This is exactly what Chris Lucas does.”

She included in her nomination a comment from the DARE essay Nathan Hjulstrom  wrote last year when he was a fifth-grader at Price’s Fork. Hjulstrom said Lucas “has the playfulness of a kindergartner, the respect of an adult, and the love of a huge stuffed teddy bear all rolled into one.”

“Chris has a remarkable talent for relating to all types of audiences, especially kids,” said Montgomery County Lt. Brian Wright.

Lucas said he thinks DARE — Drug Abuse Resistance Education — classes are effective.

“I tell all of our kids that at some point in time they’re going to be faced with a situation where they’re going to have to make some type of decision about whether to do something or not to do something,” Lucas said. “You can’t get that message out early enough.”

Another benefit to DARE, Lucas said, is that the program allows children to meet a law enforcement officer.

Some youngsters, he said, will greet him right away. Others are shy around officers.

Senior Trooper Gene Ayers  of the Virginia State Police, the state’s DARE coordinator, said he doesn’t know how many times he has heard a parent say to a child, “There’s a police officer. If you’re not good, he’s going to lock you up.”

One girl began to cry as soon as she saw Lucas at Elliston-Lafayette, saying she was scared of police, he said. He went to talk to her.

“She said, 'I thought you were going to shoot me,’ ” Lucas said. “I told her, 'I’m your friend.’ ”

The next time she saw Lucas, the girl high-fived him.

That sort of interaction, Lucas said, helps children trust their school resource officers when they enter middle school. He also stops by the preschool through fourth-grade classes at each school to introduce himself to the children and make sure they know how to dial 911.

Lucas, a 41-year-old Blacksburg native, has been with the sheriff’s office since Jan. 1, 1997. He began teaching DARE 10 years ago. He worked as a school resource officer at Christiansburg Middle School until a Christiansburg police officer took over this year.

Now, Lucas is one of two full-time crime prevention officers at the sheriff’s office.

Lucas is also running the department’s Citizens Police Academy. The father of two boys, 11-year-old Aaron and 8-year-old Jacob, he helps coach football and baseball.

He is also a tournament bass fisherman — with a room full of trophies — and is the director of the Angler’s Choice Marine Team Tournament at Smith Mountain Lake.

Part of what makes Lucas a good DARE officer is his natural ability to communicate with children, teenagers and adults, Ayers said.

“He is one of the fellows that I’ve always looked at as a strong DARE officer,” he said, even when Lucas went through the two-week class required to teach DARE several years ago.

Now, he is working to become a DARE mentor to teach other DARE officers. He spent a week late last month in Kansas City, Mo., taking class all day and doing several hours worth of homework each night. He will shadow another mentor for two weeks, then will be shadowed while he mentors before he becomes certified.

Lucas said it’s rewarding to watch a group of fifth-graders complete the DARE program, knowing they may be better prepared to face tough decisions.

“If you touch the life of just one, it’s worth it,” Lucas said. “But I think, by far, you touch the lives of many others.”

Which colleges think drinking age should be lowered?

dataspherelogosmall

Should the drinking age be lowered to 18? Some college presidents think so; some don't. Data editor Matt Chittum has more details on who's in favor and who's against -- and why on our Datasphere site of searchable data.

You can start with this post on who wants to change the rules and this post on whether public or private colleges are most in favor of a change.

Radford teacher charged following juvenile's overdose

A Radford teacher was arrested Thursday and charged with possession of marijuana and contributing to the delinquency of a minor, according to a release from the City of Radford.

We have more details on this developing story.

Editorial board calls for firing Simpkins

The editorial writers at The Roanoke Times -- who, we should point out, work quite separately from the news department -- are calling for Montgomery County schools to fire Nelson Simpkins, the school official implicated into an investigation of Standards of Learning irregularities at Eastern Montgomery High School.

The editorial writers have posted this item on the RoundTable editorial blog. You can weigh in on the impending editorial there.

For previous news coverage, see this story today by reporter Anna Mallory or yesterday's breaking news item.

Former Eastern Montgomery prinicipal faulted in SOL probe

The Virginia Department of Education has implicated Nelson Simpkins, Montgomery County’s supervisor of secondary education, in its investigation of Standards of Learning irregularities at Eastern Montgomery High School.

Reporter Anna Mallory has more details.

Giles schools re-open Wednesday

Narrows High School Principal Rex Gearhart confirmed that Giles County schools will reopen on Wednesday, a day after schools were shuttered because of a boil-water advisory. Students will continue in school through Thursday, but Friday and Monday are holidays already built into the academic calendar.

For more on the water situation in Giles, see this update from the newsroom of The Roanoke Times.

Agendas for Montgomery School Board, Christiansburg Town Council

Both bodies meet tonight at 7:30.

Here are links to the agendas for the Montgomery County School Board and the Christiansburg Town Council.

13 New River schools fall short of federal AYP standards

dataspherelogosmallAYP is the minimum level of improvement in Standards of Learning test scores, attendance and other areas that states, school districts and schools must achieve each year under the federal No Child Left Behind Act. Schools which receive Title I federal aid for low-income students and fail to make AYP for two consecutive years must offer parents the option of transferring their children to better-performing schools in the same school district.

The numbers for the most recent school year have been released 13 schools in the New River Valley fall short -- seven in Montgomery County, three in Pulaski County and three in Giles County. All schools in Radford and Floyd met the AYP standards.

You can look up the results yourself in this database on our Datasphere site of searchable data.

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Welcome to the New River Notebook blog, written by the reporters in our New River Valley bureau, located in Christiansburg. We cover everything from education to industry, local government to cops and what's important throughout our rural farmland. Meet the staff

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Comments

    • roudyred: Max: Way to go. The selection committee did some great pickin’ too.
    • roudyred: Max: Way to go. The selection committe did some greàt pickin’ too.
    • roudyred: Way to go. The selection committe did some greàt pickin’ too.
    • Ted Lawson: I’ve always been a true Hokie fan and admire the coaching of Beamer and his staff. However, I do...
    • Eugene A. Lesman: I did not know Maj. Hasan but as a retired Army Officer, I see the need to set a few facts straight...