Pubdate: Fri, 01 Nov 2002 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Danna Johnson POOCHES POUNCE ON POT Drug-sniffing dogs in local secondary schools might not be a long way off, according to two incumbent trustees. The idea comes after a drug-crime task force from the Surrey School District announced a need to partner with the local RCMP to institute random drug searches using dogs. "Sniffer dogs are in the airports and they are there for the safety of passengers," says Trustee Chris Rose. "I think it's something students will have to get used to. Maybe students need to get the message across that they can't do this." Drugs are a problem in area secondary schools, says trustee Kim Van Tine, just as they are a problem in all high schools in the province. In fact, the Raven Youth program, part of the Phoenix Centre for drug and alcohol treatment, has a program set up with the school district. Students caught under the influence of drugs at school have a choice of taking the course or facing suspension. According to counsellor Bob Hughes, 150 students went through the program last year. "It's pretty prevalent," he says, but involving police could be a mistake. "Bringing in police you criminalize the behaviour ... it's a significant problem, but is it criminal behaviour? I'm not sure." A few years ago trustees debated whether they could, legally and ethically, conduct locker searches. "The legalities and the human rights issue always came up... whose locker is it? Is it the school's locker or the student's locker?" Van Tine wonders. "It's all very complicated, but I also have to say it's the district's responsibility to do its best to provide a drug-free environment in the schools." If students are willing to take a risk and bring drugs into the school, they should expect to face consequences, Rose says, adding drugs in schools make the facility unsafe for all students. Until now, in order to conduct a locker search, probable cause was needed and a warrant had to be issued, Van Tine says. Bringing a dog into the school would provide for that probable cause if the dog indicated drugs were likely to be in a locker. "It's a deterrent more than anything. If you know there might be a drug sniffing dog in the school, you wouldn't bring in drugs. I'm not saying it would get rid of the drug problem, but it would certainly get it out of schools." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens