Pubdate: Sun, 20 Oct 2002 Source: North County Times (CA) Contact: 2002 North County Times Website: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: William Finn Bennett Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) SCHOOL DISTRICT MULLS USE OF DRUG-SNIFFING DOGS LAKE ELSINORE -- Dogs' powerful sense of smell -- estimated at 1,000 times that of human beings -- may soon be put to the test on Lake Elsinore Unified School District campuses. The district is weighing using drug- and explosive-sniffing dogs to conduct random searches of classrooms and cars parked on campus parking lots in an effort to make local schools safer, district officials say. The possible move comes against a backdrop of survey results showing rising use of illegal drugs at Lake Elsinore Unified schools. The district recently invited Fullerton-based All States K-9 Patrol Explosives & Drug Detection to make a presentation to its board of trustees, describing how the company uses the dogs. A series of federal court decisions over the past two decades, allowing the canine searches -- with certain restrictions -- has resulted in a growing number of school districts around the state and the country contracting private firms to conduct the random searches. Locally, Temecula Valley Unified School District has used a private company for more than two years to conduct random searches for drugs and explosives using canine search teams, according to Mike Runnion, the district's director of child welfare and attendance. Canine teams from San Diego-based Interquest Detection Canines annually make 34 unannounced visits to that district's three high school and four middle school campuses, Runnion said. The dogs inspect restrooms, automobiles and classrooms after students have been asked to go outside. During the 2000-01 school year, dogs signaled the presence of illegal drugs on 10 occasions and gunpowder eight times, Runnion said, calling the program a big success. "When you advertise and the dogs walk around the campus, and the students don't know when the searches will be and know other kids who got caught, the word spreads," he said. Students who are caught with illegal substances go through an expulsion process, which -- for first-time offenders -- generally results in a suspended expulsion. The offender must follow a strict disciplinary contract after the reprieve, however, and a violation may result in the expulsion being imposed, Runnion said. Temecula Valley Unified -- with approximately 21,000 students -- handed out 37 drug-related expulsions last year, Runnion said. Lake Elsinore Unified, meanwhile -- with a student population of about 18,000 -- last year had about 70 students who went through the expulsion process either for possession of marijuana or being under the influence of the drug while on campus, said Donna Dalton Opoku-Agyeman, the district's director of child welfare and attendance. All of those students were given suspended expulsions, she said -- essentially a probation. But like TVUSD students, those in Lake Elsinore schools must also sign a binding disciplinary contract, which if not honored may result in expulsion. Spike In Drug Use On Campus The number of apprehensions, however, is apparently just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the growing student use of illegal drugs on Lake Elsinore campuses, as shown by two student surveys conducted at district schools over the past three years. A 1999 state-funded, anonymous survey of district high school and middle school students showed that 5 percent of seventh-graders, 12 percent of ninth-graders and 8 percent of 11th-graders surveyed had smoked marijuana on campus. By 2001, however -- when the same private firm again conducted the survey -- those numbers had spiked to 11 percent of seventh-graders, 16 percent of ninth-graders and 15 percent of 11th-graders. The same surveys showed that whereas 9 percent of seventh-graders, 27 percent of ninth-graders and 33 percent of 11th graders had been offered illegal drugs at school, in 1999, by the 2001 study those numbers had increased to 15 percent, 38 percent and 43 percent, respectively. School district board member Jeanie Corral said she is disturbed by the increases, but that society and parents must share responsibility for what happens on campus. "I think it goes back to the kind of values that society stresses and parents or any adult models," Corral said. "I wish more parents would sit down with their young people and say to them: 'Why are you doing this?'" The district and administrators work hard to educate children on to the dangers of illegal drugs, she said. "But these efforts haven't been able to prevent youngsters from experimentation." Corral said she has mixed feelings about the idea of using the drug-sniffing canines on campus. "It raises a few questions about due process and individual student privacy, but it needs to be considered because adults need to protect the young -- that is part of our charge." One of the reasons for the increase in students using illegal drugs at school may be the growth in student population, she said. "More people means it's easier to obtain." Opoku-Agyeman said she supports the idea of using the canine teams at district schools, although the school board would allow for ample public input on the issue before making a decision. "I would support any effort that would deter drug use, because the school's function is student achievement, and where we see that is not happening, we have a responsibility to students and their families," she said. Reaction To Possible Use Of Canines On a recent afternoon, students and parents at Temescal Canyon High School had mixed reactions to the possibility of the canine searches on campus. "I wouldn't have a problem with it," said Charles Mendoza, 38, father of a 17-year-old senior. "If the student doesn't have anything to hide, he shouldn't be afraid." Another parent had a different take. "I don't think they should do that (use drug-sniffing dogs); it would be an invasion of privacy," said Carla Meza, 38, as she waited to pick up her 17-year-old daughter. Meza said she is concerned with drug use, but doesn't believe that random searches are going to address the problem of teens using drugs. "If kids want to get it or have it, they will," she said. Brad Driscoll, 18, likes the idea of the random searches, he said. "I am totally in favor," Driscoll said. "Kids being afraid they'd be caught if they brought it (to school) would totally decrease the amount of drugs brought to campus." Tenth-grader Fabiola De Anda, 15, said she resents the idea of school officials using the dogs. "Our stuff is private; they need to mind their own business," she said. "It doesn't concern other people what you bring to school." Constitutional Question The debate has raged for decades on the constitutionality of efforts by school authorities to reduce drugs on campus ---- either through the use of drug-sniffing dogs, random drug tests or physical searches of students and their belongings. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution establishes "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures ..." The Fourteenth Amendment, meanwhile, establishes guarantees against depriving citizens of liberty without due process of law. The landmark 1982 U.S. Fifth District Court of Appeals decision on the use of drug-sniffing dogs in schools, Horton v. Goose Creek Michigan Independent School District, concluded that the use of dogs to sniff student lockers and automobiles on school parking lots was lawful. It said that using the dogs to sniff students' persons without probable cause, however, was not justified. It also concluded that the mere presence of the dogs on campus was minimal harassment and not unreasonable. Another recent court decision may have further implications on the issue. Although no local school districts currently do so, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in July that schools may randomly drug-test any student participating in extracurricular on-campus activities. Officials at Temecula, Murrieta and Lake Elsinore school districts said there are currently no plans in place to institute such drug tests to students, however. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc