Pubdate: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 Source: Herald-Free Press (MO) Copyright: Herald-Free Press 2002 Contact: http://www.bolivarmonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1893 Author: Emily S. Pohlsander STUDENTS WILL GET HELP, NOT EXPULSION AFTER DRUG BUST The Bolivar High School students who were implicated in a marijuana buying and selling bust Friday will not be expelled. Superintendent Dennis Cooper said the school's role is two-fold: provide a safe learning environment and meet the needs of students. Cooper said the school will work with the students to focus on helping them with their problems. The bust - which got seven students suspended this week - has focused attention on the need for intervention. "It has alerted us to the fact that we as a community - education officials, law enforcement and most importantly parents - are going to have to open our eyes to work together to find solutions to this on-going problem," Cooper said. Disciplinary action outlined The Bolivar High School 2002-2003 student handbook allows administration some leeway when taking disciplinary action against students who bring drugs/alcohol or weapons onto campus. Drugs/alcohol 1. Possession of or attendance under the influence of any unauthorized prescription drug, alcohol, narcotic substance, counterfeit drugs or drug-related paraphernalia. First offense - 10-180 days out-of-school suspension, documentation in student's discipline record and loss of 90 school days of all school activities. Subsequent offense - 10-180 days out-of-school suspension, expulsion, documentation in student's discipline records plus loss of 90 school days of school activities. 2. Sale or distribution of any prescription drugs, alcohol, narcotic substance, counterfeit drugs or drug-related paraphernalia. First offense - 1-180 days out-of-school suspension and documentation in student's discipline record. Weapons Possession or use of any instrument or device defined as a dangerous weapon (for example, a gun). First offense - One calendar year suspension or expulsion, notification to law enforcement officials, and documentation in student's discipline record. Safe Schools Act The 1996 Missouri General Assembly enacted legislation that requires school districts to report acts of school violence. It also contains consequences of failure to obey the standards of conduct and the importance of the standards to the maintenance of an atmosphere where learning is possible and encouraged. According to the Safe Schools Act, the school district discipline policy shall provide for a suspension of not less than one year or expulsion for a student who is determined to have brought a weapon to school in violation of district policy, modifiable on a case-by-case basis by the superintendent. This shall not prevent the school district from providing education services in an alternative setting to a student suspended under the provisions of this section. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart