Pubdate: Tue, 17 Sep 2002 Source: Bergen Record (NJ) Copyright: 2002 Bergen Record Corp. Contact: http://www.bergen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/44 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) N.J. SCHOOL DISTRICT HALTING USE OF KIT TO DETECT DRUGS NEPTUNE -(AP)- Four New Jersey school districts have been conducting drug residue tests at some of their schools for several months, but one has discontinued the practice because it found the testing kits to be unreliable. The Toms River Regional and Southern Regional districts in Ocean County began testing in January without notifying the public. The tests also were implemented in the East Windsor Regional and Mercer County Vocational districts, and also are used in other states. The testing is part of a federally funded pilot program that examines the effectiveness of the kits - long used by law enforcement agencies - within a school setting. At a cost of less than $1 each, the kit almost instantaneously detects trace amounts of marijuana, heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine on a variety of surfaces. A piece of paper is rubbed on a surface and is then sprayed with an aerosol reagent that turns it a different color if drug residue is present. The testing was done on several common surfaces, such as locker doors and bathroom stalls. While the test results have not been made public, an official for the company that produces the kits said drug residue was found in all participating schools. "We're not using it for students or student discipline," John Gluck, assistant superintendent for high school safety and security in the Toms River district, told the Asbury Park Press of Neptune for Monday's editions. "We're trying to find out ... where likely areas for drug trafficking are or where people might have stored drug paraphernalia." The district plans to continue the testing this school year under a more regimented schedule, but Southern Regional has decided to drop the program. Craig Henry, principal of the district's high school, said the agents used to clean the surfaces before the tests would sometimes react with the sprays, causing false positives. "We saw no practical application because of its lack of reliability at the stage that we last saw the product," he said. "There was no point in pursuing it." The Washington D.C.-based Mistral Group, which manufactures the kits, said the kits have been modified since the problem was discovered. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk