Pubdate: Sun, 20 Feb 2000 Source: PLAINVIEW DAILY HERALD Website: http://plainviewonthe.net/ Address: 820 Broadway, Plainview, TX 79072 Email: Texas Author: Richard Orr DRUG TESTS VS. CONSTITUTION Lockney should be ashamed of itself for not coming to the side of Larry Tannahill, whose son stands to be branded with a big orange "D" because of a well-intentioned but totally misguided battle in the drug wars that are tearing this country apart and filling our prisons with people who commit victimless crimes. Last week, Lockney students from grade six through 12 began submitting to mandatory drug, alcohol and tobacco tests at random - along with administrators and teachers. How humiliating. Tannahill pulled his son out of school, rather than subject the sixth-grader to a denial of his constitutional right to "be secure in (our) persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation." Lockney authorities agree with Tannahill that the community isn't suffering a major drug problem. Instead of being satisfied, however, they launch a fishing expedition that sends a chilling message about just how far the state has gone in slowly but surely stripping away our rights - especially our right to privacy. And what's the big rush? An Amarillo federal judge is sitting on a ruling in a similar case out of Tulia last year. Judge Mary Lou Robinson has indicated she believes mandatory testing is unconstitutional but has yet to make her findings official. A favorable ruling would hand Lockney a green light. Waiting for what's likely to be an unfavorable ruling would have saved a lot of time, money and negative attention. "They are violating our civil rights," Tannahill said in a news story. "I didn't sign (the consent form) because of my beliefs. And it's my son who is paying the price." Trying to spin fuzz into gold, school Superintendent Raymond Lusk claimed: "We are not looking at this as a punitive policy. We want to emphasize the positive aspect of it." The only "positive" is that it does give kids a handy tool to resist temptation. But is that enough to justify the loss of a constitutional right that plays such a crucial role in keeping a police state at bay? And where does Mr. Lusk get off saying it's not punishment when those who fail the test - or those whose parents have guts enough to stand up and buck the tide in a small community - are subjected to in-school suspension and required to dress in jail-orange as they go around cleaning up trash on the grounds? It would be one thing if a child actually tested positive. But it's quite another if he's out there being condemned and ridiculed because his father happens to believe in the Constitution. That probably explains why one girl begged her reluctant parents to sign the form. Drug testing is for a good purpose, while the dangers it poses are abstract and easy to overlook. Every stick has two ends. Mandatory testing softens the eternal vigilance we must maintain if we expect to keep the freedom we fought for and are so rightfully proud of. What does it communicate to our young when no one - not even their parents - is willing to speak out against the governmental octopus that is slowly engulfing and smothering us? We somehow tend to think drugs were invented by hippies 40 years ago. Yet prior to the early 1900s, 20 percent of the American public was doing everything from marijuana and peyote to opium, heroin and cocaine on a daily basis. As a matter of fact, Coca-Cola derived its name from cocaine being one of the prime ingredients in the original formula. After the government cracked down (no pun intended) and started outlawing drugs - largely because Prohibition was going out of business and the huge, corrupt bureaucracy created to control alcohol needed another means of gainful employment - it took a long time before drug use declined significantly in this country. The decline wasnB4t accomplished through mandatory testing, "profiling," pretext stops, the confiscation of private property without due process or any of the other draconian measures being employed to stanch the flow of drugs today. It was accomplished the same way we've cut tobacco use by a third in the past 30 years: education - a constant barrage of information on the hazards nicotine poses to our health and welfare. Lockney should back off its social engineering program and wait for the Tulia ruling. Short of that, it should take its cues from the private sector. Enlightened employers - mine included - solved the problem of drug and alcohol use on the job without resorting to end runs on the Constitution. Employees sign a form agreeing to take a drug test if and when their behavior indicates there might be a problem. It's called probable cause. The Lockney school board exempted themselves from the policy they're imposing on everyone else. They deal with a lot of complicated issues in a multi-million-dollar school district that runs on taxpayer money. They should be tested too. (Richard Orr is a Herald staff writer. He can be reached at 806-296-1360 or via e-mail at: --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson