Last year, fentanyl addiction ran roughshod over many Karen students at St. Paul’s Humboldt High School.
Staff often found drug paraphernalia in students’ backpacks. Youth were sent to the principal’s office almost daily for issues relating to addiction, and one student overdosed in the school bathroom. But after years spent crafting a partnership between the school, police and two nonprofits, officials have formed a blueprint to fight addiction and gang influence on youth in the Karen community.
As Humboldt High School’s social worker, Kati Vaudreuil walks the halls to start her day, voices sometimes squawk through her walkie talkie in efforts to thwart trouble. Other times, Vaudreuil hugs students and asks how they are doing. District data shows a third of Humboldt high’s students are Karen (pronounced Kuh-ren), the highest percentage in St. Paul of the ethnic group native to Myanmar, formerly known as Burma. So when gang influence and fentanyl addiction struck an unequal number of Karen youth, Vaudreuil turned to the community for help.
“We said ‘we really need someone from the Karen community to help us,’” Vaudreuil said. “We started with KOM [the Karen Organization of Minnesota]. We got a partnership going, and it’s been like five years. We’ve had a few different case workers, but we couldn’t do it without them.”
Police learned last year of the alarming rate of fentanyl and methamphetamine use among the Karen teens, which fueled an escalating dispute between two gangs in St. Paul. As the Star Tribune reported, authorities and advocates found that historical trauma and a lack of resources leave Karen youth vulnerable to drugs and gang influence. Some youth were forced to use drugs at gunpoint. Many Karen parents who escaped persecution in Asia reported “extreme” depression because they don’t know how to help their kids.
Say Klo Wah, a case worker for the nonprofit KOM, began work at Humboldt last year. Vaudreuil and faculty assign Karen students to Wah, who works nine hours a week checking on those students and their families. Last year Wah frequented the school’s office to speak with troubled Karen youth. Many skipped class, and he drove students to the hospital to prevent an overdose “almost every day.”
But Wah believes the situation has improved. Overdoses are now rare. He has befriended many Karen students and their families, whom he sometimes checks on at church. And Karen students trust him with information they won’t share with school therapists. He credits KOM’s partnership with Humboldt for the improvements, and said many other schools don’t fare as well.
“Now we don’t have emergency cars coming in,” Wah said. “It’s a lot better. Less stress too.”