Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jun 2002 Source: Star Press, The (IN) Copyright: 2002 The Star Press Contact: http://www.thestarpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1925 Author: Robin Gibson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DECISION DELAYED ON DRUG POLICY FOR ATHLETES YORKTOWN - In establishing punishment for drug, tobacco or alcohol use by student athletes, Yorktown parents and school officials are trying set rules that are not too harsh or too lenient, but just right. Whether the penalties recently proposed fit that description will be up to the revamped Mount Pleasant Township Community School Board to decide next month. Presented with a proposed new policy on Tuesday, outgoing board President Ed Armantrout declined to bring up the proposal for a vote because he believed the current board would not approve it. Created by a committee of parents and school officials, the proposal would require that any athlete possessing or using tobacco, alcohol or other controlled substances be suspended immediately from all sports for 365 days after the offense. Limits are set at 50 percent of the season for the first offense, an entire season for the second offense, and for the rest of high school for the third offense. To focus not just on punishment but also on rehabilitation, the proposal specifies that students could reduce the length of their suspensions the first or second time by participating in counseling, treatment or rehabilitation. Three-time offenders could appeal to a committee for possible reinstatement after a year. A 29-member committee of parents and school officials was named to come up with a new policy after 11 Yorktown High School students - some of them athletes - were arrested in December after allegedly being caught at school with the drug OxyContin. If approved by the school board - which gets two new members in July - the committee's proposal will replace a policy that suspends athletes for a set number of games for the first offense, but only for sports then in season, Armantrout said. Second and third violations result in 1-year suspensions, regardless of season. Board member Steve Guinn said Friday that many members of the public, and even the committee, seemed divided over whether that punishment should be more severe or less severe. Allowance of an appeal after a year's suspension on the third offense was the committee's attempt to provide a compromise, Armantrout said. Armantrout said he believed the majority of the current board might prefer an even tougher policy. "I don't know what the new group's going to do," he said. Parents at Tuesday's meeting asked to meet with the board to explain the committee's intent before any vote was taken. Even the proposed new penalties might be more lenient than those set by other local schools, Armantrout said. Athletes at Central and Southside high schools who violate rules about drug, alcohol or tobacco can be suspended or removed from teams, as well as receive the same school penalty as any other student, according to Don Holderman, director of student services for Muncie Community Schools. Such rules are fairly consistent among other schools in the region and the conference, Holderman added. "Those students are representative of the school," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel