Pubdate: Wed, 09 Feb 2000 Source: Florida Times-Union (FL) Copyright: The Florida Times-Union 2000 Contact: http://www.times-union.com/ Forum: http://cafe.jacksonville.com/cafesociety.html Author: Bill Kaczor, Associated Press Bookmark: MAP's link to Florida articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/fl PUPILS, TEACHERS TRY TO CONCOCT DRUG TEST POLICY TALLAHASSEE -- Students and teachers, with an assist from the Florida Supreme Court, found developing a school drug testing policy was not as easy as it first seemed during a town hall meeting shown yesterday in classrooms across the state via television and the Internet. It was a lesson not confined to drug testing, said 11th Circuit Chief Judge Joseph P. Farina, who moderated the meeting of about 30 Florida teachers and 60 students from three Tallahassee high schools. ''The whole dynamic of discussion and considering the constitutional principles, and perhaps of developing a policy, could be used for any other issues,'' Farina said. The Miami judge added that the meeting in the Supreme Court chambers was ''not an end but a means to an end of discussion, interaction and developing a policy.'' It was part of the fourth annual Justice Teaching Institute sponsored by the Supreme Court. Each year, 25 teachers come to Tallahassee for legal education training. The meeting began with a survey. The results included majorities of teachers and students agreeing that students accused of violating drug policies should get free lawyers and that administrators be required to prove a violation beyond a reasonable doubt before a student can be expelled. They then split into smaller groups to propose specific policies that often differed from the poll results. Only one group said proof should be beyond a reasonable doubt, the same standard as in criminal trials. Three groups proposed standards less favorable to the accused. One group even proposed shifting the burden of proof to the accused student. Only one group proposed free lawyers. Two groups suggested no lawyers be allowed and two proposed that they be permitted only if paid for by the students' families. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst