Pubdate: Sun, 07 May 2000 Source: Times Leader (PA) Copyright: 2000 The Times Leader Contact: 15 North Main Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711 Website: http://www.leader.net/ DRUG TESTING BAD STRATEGY IN HASD'S WAR ON DRUGS DRUG TESTING OF Hazleton School District athletes is a bad idea for both practical and ethical reasons. Right now the district is permitted to test for steroid use among athletes, but Superintendent Geraldine Shepperson is hoping to expand the testing to include drugs - prescription and illegal. Because the law does not permit random drug testing of the student body in general - only "special" categories such as athletes - there is glaring discrimination and incompleteness in the school drug policy and a built-in unfairness to testing the district's athletes for drugs. Granted, this a practical failure that many districts choose to live with. Hazleton should not make that choice. What makes drug testing at the Hazleton Area School District so distasteful is the fact that athletes in the district already sign a pledge not to use drugs. To have them then subjected to random tests, in effect, dishonors the honor system established by the pledge. That example is not the only, nor the most troubling, potential violation of trust. Last October a 12-year-old from Freeland was arrested for selling drugs in school. He was apprehended thanks to information provided in confidence by students. Their willingness to turn in their classmate could only have been achieved because a level of trust existed between the students and the faculty and administration. Instituting drug tests, singling out a group of innocent and largely trustworthy students, will undermine the faith and goodwill that individual teachers and administrators within the district have worked so hard to nurture. That erosion of trust seems too dangerous to risk. Drugs are a hateful, deadly and destructive force in our schools, but there are more effective, equitable and honorable ways of coping than random drug tests. Certainly, education about the dangers of drugs and greater diligence on the part of school security in identifying dealers and users are the first lines of defense. But the most potent weapon is a student body that trusts its school enough to alert teachers and administrators of drug abuse within its ranks. A policy that singles out a specific segment of the school population for testing, after that group has vowed not to use drugs, will rob the Hazleton Area School District of its best weapon and its credibility. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake