Pubdate: Sun, 24 Mar 2002 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2002 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Jim Stingl WHAT SCHOOLS NEED IS A WAY TO STOP DRUGS WITHOUT THE FANGS They're talking about releasing the drug-sniffing hounds at my kid's high school because a few students were caught with pot. And some U.S. Supreme Court justices were saying last week that it's a good idea to allow drug testing of kids who want to belong to school bands, chess clubs or other extracurricular activities. It's already legal to test the jocks. I know that friends don't let friends play chess stoned, but how far are we willing to go with this intrusion of the state into our children's belongings and body fluids? We love our kids so much that we can't wait to sic law enforcement all over them in what's certain to be yet another failed attempt to eradicate drugs in a society awash in drugs. Hey, kids, remember we told you in the DARE program that it's all about making good choices and personal responsibility? Well, now it's about these dogs and armed officers trying to catch you with drugs or at least scare the crap out of you. If funding were a problem - which it never seems to be in the drug war - - we could probably have the locker sniffing sponsored by Miller or Budweiser, makers of America's favorite drug, alcohol. I called Wauwatosa Superintendent Robert Slotterback as a journalist and a parent to talk about a proposal to "lock down" (yikes, what a prison term) Wauwatosa East High School and have police dogs smell every locker plus the cars in the parking lot. In the past couple of weeks at Tosa East, three kids were caught with marijuana, he said. That's not exactly Woodstock, but the belief among administrators is that drug possession and possibly distribution at the school is a growing problem. "I trust about 99 percent of the students fully. But 1 percent have proven they can't be trusted," Slotterback said. I understand that schools own the lockers. I appreciate that schools have zero tolerance for drugs. My problem is the trade-off between our privacy and the limited good that comes from intrusive and frightening searches. We agree to be searched in airports because we prize the payoff of a flight without terrorism. I wonder how many adults would tolerate being locked down at work while dogs are brought in. I'm sure they would tell us it's for our own good. Kids Are Smart It's reasonable to conclude that some kids would be deterred from bringing drugs to school if they knew a locker sweep was imminent. Then again, they might just start carrying pot in their pockets instead. Or figuring out which drugs the dogs can't detect. The amount of drugs being consumed by students before school, in school, after school and on weekends would remain the same. The school district would get points for appearing tough, but no victory could be declared. "There's so much hypocrisy among adults toward teenagers," said Barbara Miner, managing editor of Rethinking Schools, an education reform newspaper based in Milwaukee. "Probably half the people who think this is a good idea are going to go home and have a martini tonight." "If they were serious about substance abuse, they would have a much more comprehensive approach," she said. Maybe the dogs should check out school staff lounges, too. The Mineral Point School District has been bringing in dogs twice a year for three years and has never found drugs belonging to a student. They did, however, find marijuana stems and seeds in the car of a teacher in the school parking lot. Very few school districts do random drug testing of children, and Slotterback said Wauwatosa has no intention to start. That's a relief. The school has shown it can catch druggie kids by the old-fashioned methods of nabbing them in bathroom stalls and by overhearing conversations. Drugs don't belong in schools. Kids on drugs can't learn. Parents and educators need to help kids make good choices about drugs and their dangers. But let's call off the dogs. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake