Pubdate: Thu, 23 May 2002 Source: New Jersey Herald (NJ) Copyright: 2002, Quincy Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.njherald.com/news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2162 Author: David G. Evans Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) RANDOM DRUG TESTING NEEDED IN SCHOOLS Editor: The state Department of Education's recent "Report on Violence, Vandalism and Substance Abuse in New Jersey's Schools" shows that substance abuse incidents in our schools are up 20 percent. The U.S. Supreme Court and the New Jersey courts will soon decide cases on whether a school's interest in deterring students from using drugs by the use of random drug testing outweighs the privacy interest of the students. Our hope is that the courts will uphold random drug testing of students. Drug testing deters drug use. When drugs invade a school, threatening the safety of students and disturbing the orderly learning environment, the school's interest in ridding the school of drugs outweighs the privacy interests of students. The school years are a critical passage in a young person's life. While in school, children face the challenge of learning in the academic, social, physical, and emotional realms. When drugs infect a school it cripples the learning process. Children become casualties. The physical and psychological effects of drug and alcohol use can cause lifelong and profound losses. Substance use decreases a child's chances of graduation and academic success. Researchers continually report statistics demonstrating that student drug and alcohol use is at a dangerous level. For example, the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University reports that for the last six years school children have listed drugs as the most important problem they face. A 1997 CASA survey revealed that high school students see more drug deals at school than in their neighborhoods. In the survey, 76 percent of high school students claim that drugs are kept, used or sold on school grounds. In addition, 29 percent of high school students claim that a student in their school died from a drug or alcohol-related incident in the past year. CASA also reports that substance abuse adds at least $41 billion to the costs of elementary and secondary education in terms of special education, teacher turnover, truancy, property damage, injury counseling, and other costs. According to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, students who use drugs are more likely to bring guns and knives to school leading to school violence. According to state report, assaults are up 30 percent with school staff as victims in 19 percent of the cases. Schools must be allowed to use all reasonable means to combat drugs and alcohol use if education is to be successful and our schools are to be safe. Drug testing deters drug use and gives students a reason to say "no" when their peers ask them to use drugs. Random drug testing is intended to give schools a stronger weapon to get drugs out of schools. School drug testing programs are a proven low-cost method to win the fight for our children's future. Consider the results of random drug testing of athletes at Hunterdon Central Regional High School in Flemington. After two years of testing they experienced a decline in 20 of 28 categories of drug use in the whole student population. Our nation uses random drug testing on military personnel and transportation workers to insure national security and safe travel. Our interests in student safety, health and educational quality are equally compelling. We must be willing to use the same tools to defend our children. They deserve no less. David G. Evans, Esq. Executive Director, Drug Free Schools Coalition - --- MAP posted-by: Beth