Pubdate: Tue, 21 Jan 2003 Source: Abilene Reporter-News (TX) Copyright: 2003 Abilene Reporter-News Contact: http://www.reporternews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1106 Author: Vivi Hoang Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PARENTS SUPPORT HAWLEY SCHOOL DRUG TESTING HAWLEY -- Parents voiced their support Monday for a proposal by Hawley public school officials to randomly drug-test students in extracurricular activities. Several even suggested the proposed drug testing doesn't go far enough. Hawley Independent School District officials announced a tentative plan to begin testing 25 students a month beginning next school year at a cost of about $5,000 to the district. The policy is meant to act as a deterrent -- officials have said Hawley's drug and alcohol problem is no different than any other school district's. "I know it doesn't solve our community problems, but it's a start," audience member Weldon Hayes said. About 60 people came to the forum, one of two scheduled to allow public input on the policy, which is still in the works. The next forum is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Feb. 3 at the Hawley School cafeteria, 800 1st St. Parents at the meeting expressed concern regarding how to monitor students not participating in extracurricular activities. Several said students in extracurricular activities are often the most motivated to avoid drugs in the first place. "I do believe this is a Band-Aid," one woman said. "I think this is a feel-good measure that's not going to do anything." District officials explained how laws prevent school-wide testing, and asked for ideas from the audience. Some speakers suggested allowing parents of children not in extracurricular activities to voluntarily provide their own consent that their child could be randomly tested. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that public schools can test students in extracurricular activities for drugs. If Hawley ISD enacts such a policy, it would likely be the first district to do so in the Region 14 Education Service Center area, which covers 13 counties including Taylor County. In December, Hawley trustees approved a timeline to pursue the drug-testing policy. Administrators hope to have a draft ready by March and a final reading -- as well as board approval -- by April. Superintendent Kelly Moore said seventh- through 12th-graders in extracurricular activities and their parents would have to sign a consent form at the beginning of the year. The child would be assigned a number, and an outside drug-testing agency would pick 25 to be tested each month. Students who test positive will be required to have mandatory counseling along with their parents and be removed temporarily from extracurricular activities. Moore addressed privacy concerns by saying only the superintendent and parents would learn of a child's test results. Speakers, however, noted that Hawley is small enough that people would notice a student's absence from an activity. All parents would be notified if their child was tested, as well as given the test results. The question of funding was brought up several times. Parents urged the board to not cut other school programs to pay for drug testing. District officials added that the mandatory counseling for students who test positive and their parents would be funded by grant money. District officials also said a student's testing positive would not go on their academic record or affect such things as college applications. Such information would go in a student's discipline log, which is kept separate. However, they pointed out, those drug results would be kept from seventh-grade on. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk