PLACERVILLE, Calif. — On Wednesday, Nov. 12, nearly 700 students at Ponderosa High School in Shingle Springs participated in an immersive presentation organized by the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Office School Resource Officer (SRO) program, entitled “One Pill Can Kill,” aimed at educating young people about the nationwide fentanyl crisis.
Deputy Freeman — accompanied by SRO colleagues, chaplains from the Sierra Chaplaincy, and personnel from El Dorado County Fire Protection District — led the live-action simulations and video segments that underscored the devastating potency of counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl. The program connects with the broader campaign by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) warning that just 2 mg of fentanyl — about the size of two grains of sand — can be a fatal dose.
The presentation at Ponderosa follows earlier sessions in 2024 at Oakridge High School and Union Mine High School. Organizers say additional presentations are being planned for other high schools in El Dorado County. The goal: reach youth where they are, give them the facts, and encourage them — and their parents — to talk about the dangers. According to the local county education office, California law (Assembly Bill 889) now requires schools to distribute materials on fentanyl annually.
One of the SROs involved said, “We want students to understand that what looks like a harmless pill may not be — and that one wrong decision can change a life forever.” The emotional impact of the live-action scenario in the auditorium drew visible reaction among students, underscoring that this is not just a distant statistic but a present danger in their community.
To extend the conversation, the Sheriff’s Office will host a special parent presentation on Monday, Nov. 17, from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. in the Ponderosa High School library. The event will include a short recap video of the student session, followed by a question-and-answer panel featuring a former narcotics detective, the El Dorado County Deputy District Attorney who prosecutes fentanyl-related cases, and other community stakeholders. The Sheriff’s Office is inviting parents, guardians and community members to attend.
Local families with students at any of the high schools planning presentations are urged to speak with their children about the program and the critical dangers of fentanyl-laced counterfeit pills — which may appear as legitimate medications, but have proven deadly. Schools and law-enforcement leaders emphasize that open, non-judgmental conversation at home is key to reinforcing the message.
In El Dorado County, where youth and parent education combine with school and first-responder readiness, the presentation at Ponderosa is a timely reminder that the broader opioid crisis has adapted to hidden forms — and young people are perhaps more at risk because the threats are harder to see. The community-wide call to action is clear: be aware, be prepared, and talk early.








