Pubdate: Tue, 12 Aug 2003 Source: Daily News (KY) Copyright: 2003 News Publishing LLC Contact: http://www.bgdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1218 Author: Taylor Loyal RANDOM DRUG-TEST POLICY PASSES Program Would Target Students Involved In Sports, Clubs, As Well As Those Who Drive To School The Edmonson County School Board voted Monday night to implement a new drug testing policy. The unanimous decision came after six months of discussion, meetings with the board's attorney, two public forums and two readings of the policy. According to the terms, all students in middle and high school who are involved in extracurricular activities, as well as those who drive to school and park in the school's parking lot, are subject to random drug tests. Each student and his or her parents would sign a consent form that would allow the school to test that student if chosen. The board had met with little resistance from the community until Monday's meeting, when a handful of parents debated the effectiveness of the tests. A recent University of Michigan study of 722 secondary schools across the nation showed that testing of students does not deter drug use. The researchers found that at each grade studied - eighth, 10th and 12th - there were almost identical rates of drug use in the schools that had drug testing and the schools that did not. Rhoda Webb, an Edmonson County parent, cited the study, along with others, in an attempt to persuade the board to rethink the policy. She had a list of 95 signatures on a petition asking the board to reconsider. The issue has become so controversial in Edmonson County that only one local store owner would allow Webb to display the petition for people to sign, she said. Webb, who has an 8-year-old daughter, said she'd like the board to consider a more educational approach to the problem. While the elementary school will soon begin offering a Drug Abuse Resistance Education program and the middle school offers life-skills classes, some in the audience asked what was being done at the high school. Scott Skaggs, a Kentucky State Police trooper who has a son at Edmonson County High School, spoke out strongly in favor of the drug testing policy. "I've heard that we need to teach high school students about drugs," he said. "They can teach us about drugs." The tests will be given to about 320 students a year. They will be given by outside agencies and no school personnel will be involved in the tests. Student athletes can be tested even after their particular seasons are over. The tests would cost "in the neighborhood of $10,000," according to Superintendent Darrell Cassady. The high school may also have to issue parking passes to monitor who is driving to school. Employees of a yet-to-be-chosen group would show up without students' warning and conduct the tests, board Chairman Tommy Ritter said. "Your kid's liable to get pulled three times and mine never get pulled, but that's random," he said at last month's meeting. "If you do anything else, it's not fair." Many of the members of the board have children in Edmonson County schools who could be subjected to the tests. Board member Steve Gibson said his daughter is involved in extracurricular activities, and while he doesn't suspect she is using drugs, he would be wearing rose-colored glasses if he had said for sure that she wasn't. "If she is, I hope her name is the first one pulled for the test," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart