Pubdate: Sat, 04 Mar 2000 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/index/ Author: Dave Mckinney JAIL GUARDS FAIL DRUG TESTS SPRINGFIELD--Guards at 10 state prisons tested positive for drugs at a higher rate last year than inmates tested at the same prisons, figures released Friday show. The trend occurred in four of the state's five maximum-security prisons, prompting a legislative call for the Department of Corrections to negotiate a tougher drug-testing policy with its labor union. "My constituents do not understand how drugs can get into a prison when we control all four walls," said Rep. Cal Skinner (R-Crystal Lake), a member of a House prison reform panel. Agency figures released by Skinner show 2.5 percent of 3,506 prison employees tested randomly last year had traces of drugs in their systems. "It's obvious that at least 2.5 percent of the guards are a weak link," Skinner said. "They're a potential source of drug infiltration [for inmates]." The maximum-security prisons with a higher percentage of guards than inmates testing positive for drugs included Joliet, Menard, Pontiac and Dwight. Among them, the all-female Dwight prison had the highest percentage of employees who failed random drug tests: 4.1 percent of 97 employees tested. Of 2,144 Dwight inmates tested, only 0.7 percent, or 15, had drugs in their system. Medium- and minimum-security prisons where this pattern also occurred included Danville, Sheridan, East Moline, Robinson, Southwestern Illinois and Taylorville. The prison with the highest percentage of positive drug tests was Danville, where 5.5 percent of guards randomly tested were found to have drugs in their systems. By contrast, 4.4 percent of inmates tested positive for drugs at that prison. The prison system is permitted to test 20 percent of its 16,000 employees randomly for marijuana, cocaine, PCP, amphetamines and opiates. The first time an employee tests positive, he or she is suspended without pay for 15 days. A second time nets a 30-day unpaid suspension, and a third occurrence is grounds for dismissal. Last year, 60 prison employees were suspended under that policy and three were fired, agency spokesman Nic Howell said. Skinner and prison officials agree the corrections department needs the authority to randomly test all employees and fire those with drugs in their systems after one positive test. But it is constrained by terms of its labor agreement with AFSCME Local 31, Howell said. "It's one of the things we're pushing. But it's a negotiable thing," he said. AFSCME and the state are negotiating a new contract to replace the pact that expires June 30. When asked about the numbers, a top AFSCME official flatly rejected any expansion of the prison system's drug-testing procedures. Roberta Lynch, AFSCME's deputy director, said current drug testing procedures are adequate and fair, and any expansion would divert precious resources away from addressing prison understaffing and inmate violence against guards. "For a state representative to be focused on the tiny minority of employees who use drugs, rather than focusing on the overwhelming majority of employees . . . who confront these serious problems everyday and have so few champions, I just think it's a disgrace," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg