Pubdate: Tue, 12 Dec 2000 Source: Topeka Capital-Journal (KS) Copyright: 2000 The Topeka Capital-Journal Contact: 616 S.E. Jefferson, Topeka, Kansas 66607 Website: http://cjonline.com/ Author: Heather Hollingsworth FEW HEAR DISCUSSION OF DRUG-TESTING POLICY SILVER LAKE -- The audience was small Monday night as school board members scrutinized a policy that would require students to undergo random drug tests to participate in extracurricular activities. Only three people -- including the recipient of a staffer-of-the-month award and a man who said he had reservations about the drug-testing policy but declined to give his name -- were in the audience. Steve Pegram, superintendent of Unified School District 372, said he has received a few calls about the policy from patrons, and most of them have been positive. Board members began discussing a random drug-testing policy after maintenance workers this summer discovered four hypodermic needles while power spraying the boys' locker room at Silver Lake High School. Kansas Bureau of Investigation tests revealed the needles tested positive for steroid residue. The board took no action Monday, and discussions will resume at the January meeting. Pegram said only four Kansas districts use random drug-testing policies -- Columbus USD 493, Holcomb USD 363, Bluestem USD 205 and Caldwell USD 360. Silver Lake's draft policy borrows heavily from theirs, he said. The policy calls for seventh-to 12th-grade students to enroll in a drug-testing pool within the first week of school in order to participate in activities for which they don't receive a grade. Parents also could voluntarily elect to sign up their child for the testing pool. Not less than three times per year, and no more than once a week, five to 10 students would be randomly selected from the pool to provide a urine sample. Students who weren't selected through the random pool could be tested upon the request of a school official or coach. Students who refused to provide a urine sample would be ineligible to participate in extracurricular activities. Pegram said he was told testing for steroids -- the item that sparked the random drug-testing discussions in the first place -- would cost too much. Most districts only test for steroids if there is suspicion of steroid use, he said. All positive drug tests would be followed up with a confirmation test before a conference was scheduled to discuss the results. If the test was disputed, the student ultimately could appeal it to the school board. Board members asked that the punishment for the first offense be changed from a two-week suspension from practices, meetings, performances and competitions to performances and competitions only. Punishment for the second offense would remain an 18-week suspension from all extracurricular activities. Punishment for the third offense would remain being barred from activities for the remainder of the student's enrollment in the district. Board members also asked Pegram to study whether they could make counseling and education mandatory before students could be allowed to resume full participation. "If we identify them and don't get them help," board member Emilie Fangman asked, "why are we even doing it?" - --- MAP posted-by: Kirk Bauer