Pubdate: Mon, 13 Oct 2003 Source: Rocky Mount Telegram, The (NC) Copyright: 2003 Cox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.rockymounttelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1751 Author: Jaime Bender, Rocky Mount Telegram Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) EDGECOMBE BOARD APPROVES DRUG TESTING PRINCEVILLE - Student athletes in Edgecombe County now have another reason to stay clean and sober, thanks to a new policy approved by the Board of Education on Monday to randomly test students for drugs as a condition for sports participation. The board unanimously approved the policy at its monthly meeting at Princeville Montessori School and quickly moved on to other issues. Board members had been in favor of the policy since it was first introduced to the board in August. "I'm for it because it's giving another reason for kids to keep away from drugs," board member Keith Pittman said Monday. He even suggested taking the policy beyond just athletes and requiring all students planning to participate in any extracurricular activity to be tested for drugs. The policy was revised during several policy committee meetings in past months. Board vice chairwoman Ann Kent, who heads the policy committee, said the policy falls directly in line with the school system's pre-existing drug testing policy for school bus drivers. Drug testing will only apply to middle and high school students, the policy states. It also states that cheerleading squads are subject to drug testing as well as other junior varsity and varsity teams, such as basketball, wrestling and football. Each student going out for any sports team and his or her parent must sign a written consent form before the season begins, the policy reads. The principal can determine who should be tested. A minimum of one random drug test shall be conducted for each sport in any school electing a drug test, the policy states. The principal may order additional random tests to ensure that testing is always a possibility. Students who fail the test, which involves taking urine samples, would be forbidden from participating in all interscholastic athletics for the remainder of the current season. If the student fails a second time, he or she would not be eligible for any sport for a 12-month period. After that period, the student must be tested again and can participate if the test is negative. After a third positive result, the student would be banned from sports for 24 months and must be tested again. Police intervention is not included in the policy. The policy will go into effect Jan. 1, 2004, said Superintendent Dr. Steve Stone. The board on Monday also gave school administrators permission to request a class size exception waiver for Roberson Elementary School. Its only fifth-grade class, with 31 students, has exceeded the 29-student capacity required by state law, and officials said the school system has no choice but to try to waive the class size limit. "If we can't get the waiver, we must form a combination class with another grade," Stone said. The waiver request was approved unanimously. Administrators now must submit a detailed application, which explains the school's need to maintain the oversized class, in order to obtain a waiver from the N.C. Department of Public Instruction. In addition, the board approved spending up to $115,000 on a new floor in the SouthWest Edgecombe High School gymnasium. The floor incurred extensive water damage due to a roof leak caused by Hurricane Isabel on Sept. 18, and Stone said the only way to fix the problem is to replace the entire floor. "The only big thing that happened to our schools during Hurricane Isabel was the gym floor at SouthWest Edgecombe," he said. "It is absolutely essential that we replace the floor." Contractors will make the necessary renovations before basketball season begins in mid-November, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake