Pubdate: Mon, 15 Apr 2002 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2002 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Jessica Hansen, of the Journal Sentinel staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) FIRST THE ELECTION, THEN THE DRUG TEST Lac du Flambeau Board Sets A First With Policy While many school districts now require athletes and some employees to submit to drug tests, a northern Wisconsin district has become the first in the state to subject school board members to the same scrutiny. The Lac du Flambeau School Board, in Vilas County, has approved a policy that says board members cannot hold office unless they pass an annual drug test. Under the rule, members must submit to an annual hair sample drug test. If they fail the test, the policy says, board members "will not be allowed to hold office." The policy is the only one of its kind in the state, said Ken Cole, executive director of the Wisconsin Association of School Boards. "Who does this besides them? Nobody. If somebody else had done it, we would know," he said. Trying To Be Fair School Board member Mike Zimmerman, who proposed the policy, said its intent is to create a sense of fairness in a community in which many tribal organizations and several businesses already require drug testing. "We've got the casino in town that is fully drug-tested. Simpson Electric, the tribal building - all the employees there are (tested). There were a number of people in the town who thought the school should be tested, too," Zimmerman explained. He also wanted to send a message about the board's anti-drug stance. "It was done to be straightforward, and to just try and get people to go along with the idea of having a drug-free school," he said. "We're supposed to be the bosses, so we should set the example. Shouldn't we?" In addition to being unusual, the district's policy may also be unconstitutional, civil rights attorneys say. "Usually, drug testing relates to people who hold jobs that may somehow relate to public safety," said James H. Hall Jr., an attorney on the board of the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin. Firefighters, police officers, those operating heavy machinery, even students and athletes have been subjected to drug tests in recent years, Hall said. Until now, school board members have been absent from that list. "I'm not aware of a constitutional standard that would support the imposition of drug testing as a requirement of serving on the school board," he said. "I think the spirit behind it probably has some value, but this has never been a qualification for elected officials and is not likely to be soon because there are too many peripheral issues. "It's just like saying you have to tell us if you have a heart condition before we elect you. None of those things disqualify them." Privacy Concerns Topping Hall's list of concerns is whether the rule violates board members' rights to privacy and confidentiality. Those who undergo testing must disclose what other medications they may be on because prescription drugs can skew results of tests meant to detect illegal drugs. Having knowledge of such private information disturbs Lac du Flambeau School District Superintendent Richard Vought. "Should I know what drugs you're taking? If you're taking Prozac, should I know that? Should I know if a man is taking Viagra?" Vought asked. Hall and Cole said enforcing the rule may also be a problem. "Anyone can say, 'I'm going to submit myself to a drug test.' What would happen if they didn't take it? Nothing, apparently. What would be their basis for forcing a person to take the test? They don't have one. There's a hole there," Cole said. But Zimmerman says he doesn't see the policy as unconstitutional or difficult to enforce. If board members refuse to submit to testing, Zimmerman said they would be in violation of the district's existing drug-testing policy. Since 1994, new full-time employees have had to undergo a one-time drug test before being hired. There are no drug tests for part-time or current full-time employees because of contractual issues, district officials said. Whether elected officials are legally considered employees, and whether annual testing would be allowed under the one-time test provision in the district's current policy, could be open to debate, Hall said. High Court Ruling Karyn Rotker, also an attorney with the Wisconsin ACLU, said answering such questions may be unnecessary in this case. The U.S. Supreme Court may have already settled the matter. The court overturned a Georgia law requiring candidates for office to show they took and passed a drug test in order to participate in the election, court records show. The law violated the Fourth Amendment, the court said. According to the ACLU, a Louisiana law requiring drug testing for all elected officials was also declared unconstitutional. Zimmerman said that until the rule is challenged, in his eyes, the policy stands. Zimmerman said he is unsure whether the policy, which was unanimously approved last month, will be challenged. But, he said, "We'll cross that bridge when we come to it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl