Pubdate: Wed, 14 Feb 2001 Source: Bergen Record (NJ) Copyright: 2001 Bergen Record Corp. Contact: 150 River St., Hackensack, NJ 07601 Fax: (201) 646-4749 Feedback: http://www.bergen.com/cgi-bin/feedback Website: http://www.bergen.com/ Author: ASHANTI M. ALVAREZ PATERSON TO DECIDE ON SCHOOL DRUG SEARCHES PATERSON -- Drug-sniffing dogs will roam the halls of the city's high schools if the Board of Education approves a resolution at tonight's meeting. Under the plan, the district would discuss with the Passaic County Sheriff's K-9 unit how, and how often, the trained German shepherds would sniff lockers for drugs. "I know for a fact we're going to find marijuana, crack, maybe heroin," said Mitch Santiago, the board's vice president. "I know we're going to find something." The specifics are unclear. Searches could be performed as frequently as once a month or once or twice a year at random. "It's a preventive measure," said school board attorney Joseph Ryglicki. "It's like random drug testing for a police officer or a bus driver. You can play the odds." Typically, Ryglicki said, students are informed that the school, as the owner of all lockers, reserves the right to search them. At a prearranged time, students would stay in their homerooms while three or four dogs roam the halls. Capt. Bill Mullanaphy of the Sheriff's Department said the searches would take about 45 minutes to an hour. Ryglicki said North Bergen schools have conducted such searches. Mullanaphy said Clifton and Hawthorne schools have used dogs from the Sheriff's Department to sniff for drugs. Dan Vergara Sr., youth director at Paterson's Hispanic Multi-Purpose Center, said he will bring students to tonight's meeting so they can tell of the impact drugs have had on their lives and their friends. "I've lost a couple of players on my basketball team as well as in my youth center," Vergara said. "One of them was coerced into bringing [drugs] to school, holding it in his locker, holding it on the corner." The meeting will be at 6 p.m. in Kennedy High School. "I know for a fact we have drugs in our school system," Santiago said. "The parents and children deserve better than that." - --- MAP posted-by: Kirk Bauer