Pubdate: Sun, 14 Apr 2002 Source: Medford Mail Tribune (OR) Copyright: 2002 The Mail Tribune Contact: http://www.mailtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/642 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) GOOD RIDDANCE TO DRUG TESTS It looks as though something good may come of Oregon's school budget problems after all. Money trouble has persuaded the Prospect School District to do without drug tests for student athletes next year. The district and its neighbor, Butte Falls, are the only two in the county that force students to take the tests as a condition of participating in school sports. Now Prospect says the tighter budget it expects next year includes no room for the $1,500 drug-testing program. It would be best for students if the district never found room for it again. Put aside for a minute the far-reaching issues drug tests of student athletes raise, including discrimination of a specific student group, constitutional questions around illegal searches and whether it's unreasonably embarrassing to urinate in a cup in a school bathroom while others wait in line nearby. The tests' most fundamental flaws may be the practical ones - that they offer only false assurance that students are, in fact, drug free. Prospect's tests screen for marijuana, opium, hallucinogens and methamphetamines, but the district's biggest student drug problem is surely alcohol. And kids say athletes who take drugs screened by the tests stop using before the tests and start again after. Parents of course want to protect their kids from drugs, but that's all but impossible to accomplish with a policy of any sort. Less invasive and fairer approaches such as drug-free pledges seem at least as effective as urine testing - and a lot more respectful of kids. Prospect school leaders ought to consider that as they decide how to deal with the potential for drug use among student athletes long term. Even when the budget picture looks better, we think they'll find urine tests never were money well spent. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager