Pubdate: Thu, 30 May 2002 Source: Decatur Daily (AL) Copyright: 2002 The Decatur Daily Contact: http://www.decaturdaily.com/decaturdaily/index.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/696 Author: Deangelo McDaniel Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) COUNCIL MEMBER ON DRUG PANEL Hartselle committee to develop policy for testing students HARTSELLE -- Councilman Frank Jones will represent the city on a committee that will develop a drug-testing policy for the school system. He is one of 13 members who will determine which students in extracurricular activities will be tested and what the punishment will be for a positive test. Councilmen Don Hall and Tom Chappell did not support the City Council's recommendation to place Jones on the committee. Hall said the city's representative should be a councilman with a child in school. "This way the individual would have to adopt something that he may have to live with down the road," Hall said. Chappell and Allen Stoner are the only council members with children in the Hartselle school system. Stoner declined to serve on the committee, but Chappell applied. Committee Chairman Susan Hayes has not set a date for the first meeting, but Superintendent Lee Hartsell said it may be next week. Mrs. Hayes is assistant principal at Hartselle High School. Other committee members include school board Chairman Susan Puckett; Hartselle coaches Christy Ferguson and Johnny Berry; high school teacher Judy Praytor; community volunteer Cleo Stubbs; Lt. Tom Sparks of the Hartselle Police Department; band parent Greg Dobbs; cheerleader parent Pam Byford; athletic parent Barry Hamilton; and students Juan Ward and Amanda Munger. The committee will not finalize the policy until the U.S. Supreme Court rules in a case involving student drug testing in Oklahoma. One of the issues in the case is whether public schools can require drug tests of all students in extracurricular activities, even if they are not suspected of drug use. The plaintiffs' claim that testing without suspected drug use violates the student's Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches. Another question in the case is whether the schools' interest in protecting students and eliminating drug use overrides student privacy. Hartsell is concerned about the financial impact drug testing could have on the system, especially if Hartselle follows the policy Limestone County uses. The Limestone system tests all athletes at the beginning of each sport season, but the students are subject to random tests. The Limestone school system budgets $50,000 for the drug-testing program. Between 500 and 600 Hartselle students participate in extra-curricular activities. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex