Pubdate: Sun, 30 Jun 2002 Source: Star-Gazette (NY) Copyright: 2002sStar-Gazette Contact: http://www.stargazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1005 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) CHECKING ON STUDENTS School Districts Should Gauge Local Attitude Before Enacting a Drug-Testing Program A sharply divided U.S. Supreme Court last week approved random drug testing of public school students, removing any concerns that the practice would violate their constitutional rights. But before school districts rush to kick any such plan into effect, they should consider: - - Whether the problem is severe enough to warrant random testing. - - Public opinion and whether local residents want drug testing. - - The expense of testing students, once or more each school year. The court's 5-4 decision in an Oklahoma case widens the scope of an earlier decision that upheld testing of student-athletes to now include all students who participate in extracurricular activities, including drama clubs and chess teams. What wasn't clear was whether the decision means all students, even those not in sports or clubs, could be tested. Nancy Bojanowski, manager of policy services in the Erie 1 BOCES district near Buffalo, provides policy-making advice to more than 300 school districts in New York, and she estimates fewer than 10 percent of them have a student drug-testing policy. She believes the low proportion could be attributed to uncertainty about the constitutionality of testing, but she added that in the wake of last week's decision, districts should not rush into enacting such a policy. David Ernst of the New York State School Boards Association in Albany said districts that develop drug-testing policies should make sure they reflect their communities' values. A spot check with Chemung County districts indicates none has a student drug-testing policy. Before any school boards act, they should ask residents and determine how badly they want a drug-testing policy and if so, how extensive it should be. Among the issues they will want to consider is how much of the student population to include -- just the athletes and those in extracurricular activities or all students? They also will have to determine whether a New York state education law that requires parental permission will mean moms and dads will have to sign waivers first. Then there's the cost. A drug test and analysis costs $35 at St. Joseph's Hospital, a spokesman there said. In large districts such as Elmira, Horseheads and Corning, that would amount to thousands of dollars a year more in school budgets. There is no one-size-fits-all policy for districts. What Elmira does might be far different from Corning. Whatever boards decide, though, should be done in step with their communities. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel