Pubdate: Mon, 18 Mar 2002
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 2002 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: Tim Talley (AP)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

COURT TO DECIDE ON SCHOOL DRUG TESTS

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Lindsay Earls wanted to offer her voice and musical talent 
to Tecumseh High School's choir and its marching band. But first, she had 
to offer a urine sample.

In 1998, her school district asked students who engaged in extracurricular 
activities from seventh through 12th grades to consent to drug testing.

"It was sort of sprung on us," said Earls, now a freshman at Dartmouth 
College. "I felt strongly about it. That is none of their business."

Her lawsuit before the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday could help decide 
whether school districts can require drug tests for students who want to 
participate in after-school activities from cheerleading to chess squad.

At issue is whether the Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable 
searches allows drug tests without evidence that the student or the school 
has a drug problem.

"It's basically a misdirected policy," said Graham Boyd, an attorney for 
the American Civil Liberties Union who represents Tecumseh School District 
students who challenged the district's random drug-testing policy.

"The most effective way to keep students from using drugs is to engage them 
in after-school activities," Boyd said. "The last thing you want to do is 
to put up barriers to these activities."

Supporters argue that testing deters illegal drug use by students before it 
becomes a problem.

"We don't think you should have to have a disaster on your hands before you 
do something to stop it," said David G. Evans of the Drug-Free Schools 
Coalition.

"This is really all about protecting kids. It gives kids a chance to say no."

At Tecumseh High School, only students involved in competitive 
extracurricular activities were tested on the theory that by voluntarily 
representing the school, they had opened themselves to greater scrutiny 
than other students.

Earls said she provided urine samples for testing two or three times. All 
of the tests came back negative.

Overall, 505 high school students were tested for drug use. Three students, 
all of them athletes, tested positive, Boyd said. Two of the athletes also 
participated in other extracurricular activities.

The school offered drug counseling after a positive test, and those who 
complied could remain on their teams. Those who refused were barred from 
competition.

In 1995, the Supreme Court ruled that a school district in Vernonia, Ore., 
could require drug testing for students involved in athletic competition.

"When courts have upheld blanket drug-testing, it has been based on some 
dangerous activity" like sports, Boyd said. "There's nothing about singing 
in the choir that poses any danger."

Earls, her sister, Lacey Earls, and a third student, Daniel James, sued the 
school district in federal court alleging that the policy violated their 
Fourth Amendment rights.

A district judge in Oklahoma City upheld the policy, ruling that the 
intrusion into the students' privacy interests was minimal considering the 
devastating effect of illegal drug use on children.

But the decision was overturned by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals 
in Denver, which said it is generally unconstitutional for public schools 
to require students in non-athletic extracurricular activities to be tested 
for illegal drugs.

Legal papers filed by Tecumseh's attorney, Linda Meoli of The Center for 
Education Law in Oklahoma City, said a student drug problem has existed in 
the district since at least the 1970s.

But Marsha Levick, legal director of the Juvenile Law Center in 
Philadelphia, said there is not much evidence of drug use in Tecumseh, 
about 30 miles southeast of Oklahoma City.

"It's very minor and very trivial and very episodic," she said.
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