Pubdate: Sun, 17 Mar 2002 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: A10 Copyright: 2002 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Charles Lane, Washington Post Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) COURT TO WEIGH DRUG TESTING BY SCHOOLS Justices to Decide if Choir, Club Members' Privacy, Like Athletes', May Be Breached Lindsey Earls remembers vividly the day in the fall of 1998 when a teacher called her and several other students out of choir class at Tecumseh High School in rural Oklahoma and told them it was time to take a drug test. The girls went to a restroom and urinated in cups while teachers stood outside the stalls listening for sounds of cheating. Afterward, the teachers examined each cup to make sure it contained a liquid of the requisite color and temperature. "It was really awkward," Earls, now a first-year student at Dartmouth College, said in an interview. "The potential that four or five kids may use drugs is not a good enough reason to invade the privacy of all the other kids." Earls was found drug-free, but she felt the experience was so unpleasant that she and her parents contacted the American Civil Liberties Union. Aided by ACLU lawyers, they launched a federal lawsuit in 1999, saying the Constitution prohibits the local school board's policy of requiring random drug testing of all students who wish to participate in extracurricular activities such as choir and Future Farmers of America. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case, which has turned into a major battle about the degree to which the war on drugs should take precedence over student privacy concerns. The court's decision in the case will provide crucial guidance to public school systems across the country contemplating whether to implement policies like Tecumseh's. Given the importance of extracurricular activities to students' college applications, the implications are potentially significant to many American families. School officials in Tecumseh, supported by friend-of-the-court briefs from a wide array of anti-drug organizations, school boards and the Bush administration, say the policy is a minor intrusion on student privacy intended to deter drug use, not punish it. They say the program is justified by the threat to health and safety posed by illegal drugs. "This school district developed its policy out of care and concern for its students," said William H. Bleakley, a lawyer for the Tecumseh school district. But opponents of the policy, including not only the ACLU, but also such groups as the American Academy of Pediatrics and the libertarian Cato Institute, which have filed friend-of-the-court briefs on Earls's behalf, say that students in choir and the like are already drug-free, and that, if anything, the prospect of a drug test actually might drive some students away from supervised after-school activities that help them resist drugs. "The single best way to prevent drug use is to get students into choir and band and the rest," said Graham A. Boyd, the ACLU-affiliated attorney who will argue Earls's case before the court. "The last thing you want to do is set up barriers to that." At the heart of the legal issues in the case is a 1995 Supreme Court ruling that authorized public high schools to require student-athletes to take random drug tests as a condition of playing on teams. The court reasoned that there was substantial evidence of a major drug problem in the school in question -- to which football players and others were contributing heavily. Also, the court held that athletes have less expectation of privacy because they already consent to disrobing in locker rooms and showering together. As a result, the court held, there could be an exception to the usual constitutional requirement for a search warrant. In the Lindsay Earls case, a federal district court agreed with the school district that the 1995 Supreme Court ruling could apply to nonathletic activities. But a year ago, the Denver-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit reversed the district court 2 to 1. School authorities had not shown enough evidence that drug use by participants in nonathletic activities was a major problem, the court held. The 10th Circuit's divided ruling added to a conflict among lower courts, and the Supreme Court agreed to sort it out by hearing the school district's appeal. Tecumseh school authorities point to the fact that students who participate in extracurricular activities also voluntarily surrender much of their privacy, for instance, when they travel to out-of-town singing competitions and must sleep in crowded dormitory rooms. The school authorities argue in their brief that even Future Farmers of America could be put at risk by drugs if the students use them during animal shows where they have to keep control over animals weighing hundreds of pounds. School authorities note that police are never notified of positive test results. The ACLU counters that the health risks are not nearly comparable to those that drug use adds to contact sports such as football. Indeed, the ACLU vigorously disputes the school district's portrayal of Tecumseh as a community where parents and teachers report that marijuana use has grown despite the measures -- including surveillance cameras and drug-sniffing dogs -- that are already in place at the schools. "The kind of unsubstantiated anecdotal evidence of drug use that the district puts forth in support of a special need for drug testing could be conjured from the halls of every high school in America," the ACLU says in its brief. In its friend-of-the court brief supporting the school district, the National School Boards Association says that "many" of the nation's 14,700 school systems adopted drug testing in some form after the 1995 Supreme Court case. Testing has not become the norm, however, partly because of the lingering legal uncertainty over how far that rule applies, the association said. "When the court signs off on a form of drug-testing, it plants a seed in school boards that might have not otherwise considered it," said Boyd, the ACLU-affiliated lawyer. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl