Pubdate: Wed, 28 Nov 2001 Source: Duluth News-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2001 Duluth News-Tribune Contact: http://www.duluthnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/553 Author: Chris Hamilton Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1956/a07.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) BUS DRIVER WINS DRUG SUIT A federal jury Tuesday awarded a former Moose Lake school bus driver $120,167 for the humiliation and lost wages he suffered after his supervisor disclosed private information about the driver's refusal to take a drug test. Duane "Dewey" Anderson, 57, said he's never taken drugs in his life. So he sued in U.S. District Court in Duluth, alleging that in the process of making the disclosure the Moose Lake School District broke the law. Anderson's attorney, Peter Nickitas, had argued that the only way to repair his client's "shattered reputation" was to make the school district pay. Apparently, the jury agreed. The jury reached its verdict Tuesday after a week of testimony before Judge John Tunheim and five hours of deliberation. Anderson got $108,000 of the $150,000 Nickitas asked for in damages for pain, suffering and loss of reputation, plus $10,000 for lost earnings, according to court papers. Anderson, who said the accusations caused him mental anguish, received $2,067 in past and future medical expenses. However, the jury only assessed the school district $100 in damages intended to punish or deter future violations. Anderson was suspended from his job as a bus driver for the Moose Lake School District in May 1998 when the district said he failed to provide enough urine for a drug test and refused to take a second test. Anderson had testified that he provided a sufficient sample. Taking a second test would be like admitting that he failed the first test, he said. But the school district said federal regulations maintain that a test refusal is equivalent to the driver testing positive. The testing lab later determined that Anderson provided enough urine and there was no trace of drugs in his body. A witness testified that Moose Lake schools transportation supervisor Art Forse told him in public that Anderson refused to take a drug test. Forse denied saying that. The jury decided that the school district, through Forse, violated the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act and thus was responsible for Anderson's claims. Jury foreman Darrell Wil-liamson, of Pine City, said that was the main factor in the jury's decision. "We believed that if they wouldn't have made that disclosure public, then his name wouldn't have been dragged through the mud," Williamson said. Anderson and his wife, Dianne, testified the repeated harassment they received in the community after the disclosure forced them to leave Moose Lake and move to Forsyth, Mo. Anderson declined comment when reached by phone Tuesday. John O'Donnell, the attorney representing the school district, said they are deciding whether to appeal. O'Donnell said the disclosure never happened and the claim was solely based on one unreliable witness's testimony. Williamson disputed that assertion, saying several witnesses made it "kind of a proven fact." O'Donnell also told jurors that Anderson only sued the district because the family farm had failed. The school district is self-insured as a member of a trust with districts across the state, O'Donnell said. Ultimately, the awarded money will come from instructional dollars, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake