Pubdate: Sat, 02 Nov 2002 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2002 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.fyiwinnipeg.com/winsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: Frank Landry NO BACKING DOWN Division To Forge Ahead With Athlete Drug Testing A rural Manitoba school division deep in the province's Bible Belt refuses to back down from its plan to test jocks for drugs just because of a little controversy. Garden Valley School Division Superintendent Dom Wilkins said yesterday the Winkler-area school division will continue to push for the random tests despite warnings from the province and privacy watchdogs that the policy may infringe on human rights. But Wilkins admitted red flags raised about the landmark policy from provincial ombudsman Barry Tuckett have caught him off-guard. "That's his jurisdiction to do that," Wilkins told The Sun. "I am personally a little surprised by it, yes." The one-year project would require student athletes at Garden Valley Collegiate and their parents to sign forms consenting to informed random drug tests throughout the year. It would be a requirement to participate on the high school's athletic teams. Steroids would not be tested for. The province, school division and privacy experts believe no other school in the country has a similar policy for drug testing. Wilkins yesterday stressed that though the program has been approved in principle by trustees, it will not be implemented until final approval is given by lawyers. "The board is certainly concerned about that, and has been concerned from the start," he said. Tuckett, the province's privacy watchdog, earlier this week said he is considering looking into the policy to see whether it violates Manitoba's Personal Health Information Act or takes away a student's right to privacy. Education Minister Ron Lemieux had similar privacy concerns. David Loukidelis, B.C.'s information and privacy commissioner, slammed the Garden Hill policy. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth