Pubdate: Sun, 24 Mar 2002 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2002 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Section: Editorial/Op-Ed Authors: Gilbert J. Botvin, Jeffrey Rosecan, M.D., Susan Bandes, Walter M. Luers Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n516/a01.html?10840 SHOULD A SCHOOL TEST FOR DRUGS? Re "Supreme Court Seems Ready to Extend School Drug Tests" (front page, March 20): Expanding random drug testing from only students participating in sports to those involved in other extracurricular activities is intended to deter drug use. However, it may deter students from participating in after-school activities, thereby increasing the risk of drug use. Schools and communities should adopt prevention approaches already proven effective. Dramatic advances have been made in prevention research in recent years, leading to the development of effective parent, school and community programs. Respected studies have shown that the most powerful programs can cut drug use by up to 60 percent. We now have the arsenal of prevention approaches necessary to prevent drug abuse. But unless it is adopted and widely used, we will not achieve the results that it promises. GILBERT J. BOTVIN New York, March 20, 2002 The writer is a professor of public health and psychiatry, Weill Medical College, Cornell University. *************************************************************************** To the Editor: Drug testing (front page, March 20) is a tool to monitor an individual's drug use -- no more or less. It doesn't separate drug use from drug abuse; only a comprehensive examination by a qualified professional can make that distinction. The Supreme Court's apparent intention to permit schools to test students is merely an extension of the selective drug testing that society has long mandated in the Olympics, in professional sports and in certain workplace situations (like testing the conductor after a train accident). Still, drug testing of high school students might be more acceptable if it were done with the parents' consent for students under 18. JEFFREY ROSECAN, M.D. New York, March 21, 2002 The writer is an assistant professor of psychiatry, Columbia University. *************************************************************************** To the Editor: Re "Supreme Court Seems Ready to Extend School Drug Tests" (front page, March 20): Justice Anthony M. Kennedy's "implied slur" on the family that challenged the drug-testing policy of an Oklahoma high school -- he told the family's lawyer that no parent would send a child to a "druggie school" except "maybe your client" -- was deeply troubling, not only because it was a startling breach of decorum. When the court first upheld school drug testing (for athletes) in 1995, it gave weight to the fact that when the testing policy was raised at a public meeting, few parents objected to it. Justice Kennedy's statement that those who assert their Fourth Amendment rights must be willing to send their children to "druggie schools" is exactly the sort of chilling assumption that such parents face. Justice Kennedy ought to recognize the courage of those who stand up for their constitutional rights. SUSAN BANDES Chicago, March 21, 2002 The writer is a professor at DePaul University College of Law. *************************************************************************** To the Editor: Re "Supreme Court Seems Ready to Extend School Drug Tests" (front page, March 20): It is remarkable that the wing of the Supreme Court that is most concerned with limiting federal interference with the states and individuals would be receptive to such a powerful intrusion into our daily lives. Furthermore, the highly tenuous connection between engaging in extracurricular activities and drug testing seems to open an entirely new can of worms. For example, wouldn't our roads be safer if everyone who applied for a driver's license were tested for drug and alcohol use? Isn't saving lives at least as important as being sober and alert during band practice? WALTER M. LUERS Jersey City, March 20, 2002 - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom