Pubdate: Thu, 25 Jul 2002 Source: DrugWar (US Web) Copyright: 2002 Kalyx com Contact: http://www.drugwar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2410 Author: Doug McVay Note: Doug McVay is the Editor, Drug War Facts; Research Director/Projects Coordinator Common Sense for Drug Policy; 1327 Harvard Street NW (lower level), Washington, DC 20009: phone 202-332-9101 -- fax 202-518-4028 http://www.csdp.org/ -- http://www.drugwarfacts.org/ http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) THE SYMBOLISM OF MANDATORY TESTING TEENS IN SCHOOL I was raised in a factory town in central Iowa. Growing up, I was fairly bright, always top in my classes. But I was also a very shy, lonely, unsocialized nerd who got teased and bullied almost daily. I joined the choir because through it I could be with other kids like me. The bullies didn't do choir, or orchestra, so it was great. I even did well, so I stuck with it. Participating in choir helped build my self-esteem, gave me self-confidence. Eventually I got into debate, even drama. Extracurricular activities helped me a lot. I would never have done any of that if I'd been forced to prove that I was 'clean' by giving a urine sample. No, I wasn't a little pot-head, I would have tested clean as a whistle. The humiliation of being made to urinate on command, in front of a teacher witness, when I hadn't even done anything, would have been enough to keep me from ever trying out. That's why I oppose the urine testing of kids who want to sing in choir, or participate in debate. Oh, sure, the cost is one factor -- at $10 to $20 a pop, the tests sound cheap. Until you do the math. For example, one year my high school choir had 90 voices. A test at the beginning of the year for everyone, like the Tecumseh, Oklahoma system program calls for, is 90, plus random testing of some kids throughout the year, say just 10% each month (9x9 or 81), for a total of 171 tests, at a cost of between $1710 and $3420 a year. That's only for the choir. Our program was always underfunded, there wasn't an extra $3420 lying around, so choir would have had to make budget cuts. Since it wouldn't have caught anyone, proponents would have claimed that testing was 'successful.' Thing is, there were almost no drug users in choir, or band, and the ones that did use anything mostly used alcohol. (Alcohol leaves the system hours after use, so a kid would have to show up drunk to get busted by a urine test.) Claims of success would have been absolutely false. Let's run through this once again: The kids who would be targeted under this Court-approved scheme are the shy, quiet intellectual types who want to participate in music, debate, and other non-athletic activities -- the very kids who are least likely to be drug users. These kids, some of whom are participating in choir or band to build their self-confidence, would be made to humiliate themselves by urinating in front of a teacher witness. (And by the way, who will you be allowing to watch your child go to the bathroom?) Some of them wouldn't do it. The rest would have to live with repressed anger and resentment, something which in these post-Columbine days one would think we don't want to encourage. Urine testing programs cost thousands of dollars a year, even for a mid-sized school district. One program, in Dublin, OH, was abandoned after spending thousand of dollars and catching only 10 kids. For the money, the school system could have hired a counselor. They could also have funded any of dozens of effective, proven prevention programs, such as those recommended by the federal Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. (None of which involve urine testing.) There is a great deal of research on what works. In contrast, the National Research Council noted a year ago regarding school drug testing programs that "There is no scientific evidence regarding the effects of these programs, either on drug use or on the learning environment." We're told that urine testing of innocent kids is an important symbol. But a symbol of what? Certainly not of American values and common sense. No, these programs are symbols of the utter failure of not just the drug war, but also the imaginations of those who run it. They can't stop people from doing illegal drugs, so they will instead punish everyone, especially the innocent, for their failure. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake