Pubdate: Wed, 20 Mar 2002 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2001 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Website: http://www.freep.com/ Author: Mark Helm, Hearst Newspapers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Note: The Boston Globe and the Associated Press contributed to this report. DRUG TESTS, KIDS' RIGHTS ARE WEIGHED BY JUSTICES Oklahoma School Policy Could Set A Precedent WASHINGTON -- To fight drug abuse among children, a school should be allowed to perform random narcotics tests on students in extracurricular activities, a lawyer for an Oklahoma school district told the Supreme Court on Tuesday. Several of the justices expressed strong sympathies for expanded urine screening of students -- suggesting the court will open the door for blanket drug tests for virtually all 24 million public secondary-school students nationwide. A decision striking down the policy could help strengthen the privacy rights of public school students. Linda Meoli, representing the Tecumseh, Okla., school board, called its policy requiring the tests for all 7th- through 12th-graders seeking to join extracurricular activities a reasonable response to the drug use problem among the nation's youth. Meoli said the policy makes students "think twice about using drugs and gives them a way to say, 'No,' when other students pressure them to use drugs." But Graham Boyd of New Haven, Conn., representing a student who challenged the policy, said the drug testing unfairly targets students participating in extracurricular activities. Boyd, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer, said even school officials acknowledge that such youngsters are unlikely to use illegal narcotics. "If there was some evidence that drug use among these students posed a danger to themselves or others, I could maybe see this policy, but in this case, you're talking about the choir," he said. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor agreed, saying the policy seemed to penalize students in extracurricular activities. Calling it "absolutely odd," she said the program is "structured in a way that does little good." However, Justice Antonin Scalia sarcastically asked Boyd whether he considered a drug overdose a danger to a student who dies. "Of course, your honor," Boyd replied. "But these students are the least likely to use drugs. So there is almost no chance of that happening." Tecumseh school officials estimate that about 5 percent of their students use drugs and said that the vast majority of those using narcotics do not go into extracurricular activities. But Justice Anthony Kennedy asked why a school should wait until drug use rises to dangerous levels before trying to fight the problem. He told Boyd, "You're saying there must be a great crisis -- they should lose a few years of students before acting?" Kennedy dismissed objections to drug testing by suggesting that mandatory urine screening was little different from requiring students to wear a school uniform. Justice Stephen Breyer noted that the Supreme Court ruled in 1995 that a school can impose testing on athletes as a response not just to local problems but to nationwide drug use. The court found that the school in the 1995 case had a widespread drug problem, and student athletes were among the users. Students who routinely strip naked in a locker room have a lower expectation of privacy than other students, the court reasoned then, and students who used drugs while playing vigorous sports could also be a danger to themselves or others. Breyer, who voted with the 6-3 majority in the 1995 case, suggested the Oklahoma school district took the logical next step. "It's hard for me to see. . . . I'd come out different here," he noted Tuesday. In a friend-of-the-court brief, Solicitor General Theodore Olson outlined the Bush administration's backing for the Tecumseh policy. Olson noted that a 2000 government survey showed 54 percent of high school seniors reported some illegal drug use in their lifetime. Nearly 25 percent said they had used drugs within the previous month. "Schoolchildren are not only more vulnerable to drug use than adults, but such abuse is much more likely to devastate their lives," Olson wrote. Student Speaks Out The Tecumseh policy, implemented in 1998, requires students taking part in extracurricular activities to agree to random drug tests throughout the year. The school offers such activities as sports, band, chorus, Future Homemakers of America, Future Farmers of America, cheerleading and academic teams that compete against similar teams at other schools. Students who tested positive were allowed to continue in the activities as long as they agreed to drug counseling and follow-up tests. Students who tested positive a second time within one school year were suspended from their activities for 14 days but allowed to return after agreeing to four hours of substance-abuse education and follow-up testing. Students who tested positive three times within a school year were suspended from the activities for the rest of the school year. Records of students' drug tests were kept in a separate file from their usual school records and could be seen only by the students, their parents, the principal, the athletic director and academic coaches. During the first year, 505 high school students were tested for drug use. Three students, all of them athletes, tested positive, according to court documents. In 1999, the policy was challenged by Lindsay Earls, who wanted to sing in the school choir, march in the school band and compete on her school's academic team. Earls, now a freshman at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, argued that the policy violated the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches. "The constitutional rights of a lot of students are at stake here," Earls said after Tuesday's oral argument session. "My biggest fear is there will be students drug tested all over, students whose privacy is invaded." Wider Testing Is Rare In 1999, a federal judge in Oklahoma City upheld the Tecumseh policy, but a panel of the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver struck it down by a 2-1 vote. The appeals court said the possible deterrent effect of the tests wasn't enough to justify their use as a condition to participation in extracurricular activities. Wider drug testing remains relatively rare among the nation's 15,500 public school districts. Lower courts have disagreed on the issue. State courts in Colorado, Indiana and Pennsylvania have struck down random drug tests for those in extracurricular activities. However, two federal appeals courts -- the 7th Circuit in Chicago and the 8th Circuit in St. Louis -- have upheld similar programs. Besides its 1995 decision, the Supreme Court has upheld random drug tests for railroad employees involved in accidents and for U.S. Customs Service agents working in drug law enforcement. But the high court has also struck down a Georgia law that required candidates for certain offices to submit to drug tests. A final ruling on the latest case is expected by early summer. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk