Pubdate: Sat, 23 Mar 2002 Source: Northwest Florida Daily News (FL) Copyright: 2002 Northwest Florida Daily News Contact: http://www.nwfdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/313 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) SCHOOL DRUG TESTS AND STUDENT RIGHTS The fact that children aren't allowed to vote, drive, drink, etc., doesn't mean they have no rights at all. Certainly, adults shouldn't abuse them physically or otherwise. And children have a right to expect their parents' love and all that goes with it, including food, shelter and moral nurturing. That said, we found ourselves reassured by the overall good sense on the subject of children's rights that emanated from the nation's highest court this week. In a case argued before the Supreme Court over drug tests for students, several justices strongly suggested they don't have a problem with broad intrusions into students' personal lives - whether by testing for drugs or screening for weapons - even absent specific suspicions about individuals. The case involved a sophomore choir singer at a rural Oklahoma high school who had objected to the mandatory urine tests that came with participation in extracurricular activities. Sweeping aside the student's lawyers' concerns about the need for "individualized suspicion" - some evidence the student to be tested is under the influence or uses controlled substances - before a school can test for drugs, several justices made clear that the Fourth Amendment's bar on unreasonable searches and seizures simply doesn't apply to those in the custody of the school system. "You are dealing with minors here," said Justice Antonin Scalia. "There's a world of difference between minors and adults." Justice Scalia said school officials make the rules at school, and he derided the notion that students have privacy rights. Justice Stephen Breyer compared drug testing to metal detectors at school doors. Justice Anthony Kennedy joined in with a ringing denunciation of the "drug culture" and speculated that most parents support policies such as screening kids for drug use. We find their views heartening - not because we endorse the nostrums employed by the school in the case before the court, but because there is an underlying wisdom in reaffirming the "world of difference" between minors and adults. Granted, there's much overkill and just plain silliness, all too often politically motivated, to be found in the "zero tolerance" policies embraced by school boards around the country. Though there are understandable worries about violence and drug use among teens and even pre-teens, many of the responses are overwrought and unreasonable. What the court seemed to be saying, though, is that the way to file the rough edges off such overreaching policies is through parents interacting with their elected school board members. Which is to say these debates aren't really constitutional fodder for the courts as much as they are policy matters for representative government to sort out. When most of us entrust our minors to the daily oversight of public schools, we extend to those schools the authority to ensure that our kids are safe, disciplined and, of course, educated. As a result, students don't get exclusive access to their lockers, and they may even be asked to file through metal detectors every morning and then provide a urine specimen before joining the football team. Whether those policies make sense under the circumstances in any given locale is for that community, not the courts, to figure out. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager