Just days before his high school graduation party, Jimmy Mayer lay on his bedroom floor, frothing at the mouth, his chest heaving and his skin an ashen gray. A needle rested by his arm when his startled grandmother found him unconscious.
While he was in the ambulance, Jimmy's cellphone rang, his mother said. It was another kid who'd just graduated from St. Francis High School, someone Jimmy's mother and other parents say survived two heroin overdoses himself, one on school grounds.
"There were at least 20 kids at school who were using heroin last year," Jimmy said this week. "Now that I've been clean for four months, it makes me wonder, what's going on in St. Francis? Why can't somebody do something?"
The same question is rippling across St. Francis, a northern Anoka County community of 7,000 that finds itself in the grips of what some parents believe is a heroin epidemic. Three young people have died of overdoses since May — two by heroin, authorities believe, and a 15-year-old from mixed prescription opiates. Another three young men have been hospitalized in recent months because of heroin overdoses.
Five years ago, heroin killed two people in Anoka County; this year, the toll already is 21, the county medical examiner's office says. Throughout Minnesota, heroin deaths rose 40 percent between 2010 and 2012.
In St. Francis, three mothers of young heroin users told the Star Tribune that local school officials were warned two or three years ago that the school district had a growing heroin problem. Rather than wait for the district's response to the recent overdoses, a group of concerned parents has said enough is enough. They've created a nonprofit to combat the spread of heroin, started a Facebook page and organized two forums, one on Monday in East Bethel and the other on Nov. 21 at St. Francis High School.
Jackie Mayer, Jimmy's mother, said she will do whatever she can to help the parents' group, but also recalls a conversation she had with a St. Francis High School official after her son's overdose on July 7. She spoke of a previous incident, she said.
"You had two kids who did heroin and overdosed right in the school parking lot," she said she told the official. "How can the school not do anything about this?"