Pubdate: Tue, 04 Mar 2003 Source: Bristol Herald Courier (VA) Copyright: 2003 Bristol Herald Courier Contact: http://www.bristolnews.com/contact.html Website: http://www.bristolnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1211 Author: Mike Still Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) BRISTOL VIRGINIA SCHOOL BOARD TO GET DRAFT DRUG POLICY AT MARCH 17 MEETING Bristol Virginia School Board members will get their first look March 17 at a draft policy that would require drug testing for all students involved in extracurricular activities. School Superintendent Frank Finan confirmed Monday that School Board members will then have their first discussion on the draft -- drawn up at the board's request by School Board Attorney Joseph Lyle -- since the board discussed the issue in January. The policy was not on the board's Monday meeting agenda, and Finan said the draft does not yet represent the board's official position on the matter. Under the draft policy, any student and his or her parent or guardian would have to sign a consent to drug testing, including a mandatory initial drug test, before being eligible to participate in any extracurricular activity. A random, weekly urine screening arrangement would be established under a school board-selected drug abuse prevention coordinator, with privacy and security arrangements to be set up within a testing procedure. Law enforcement personnel would not be informed of positive test results under the proposed policy, "absent legal compulsion by valid and binding subpoena or other legal process, which the school system shall not solicit." Lyle told the board in January that U.S. Supreme Court decisions in 1995 and 2002 allow the drug testing, not as punishment but for protection of the student and those around him or her. The policy also would not prevent the board from using other disciplinary measures in division policy "when founded upon reasonable belief and suspicion that the student has participated in illegal drug-related activities." A positive drug test, under the draft policy, would result in notification of the superintendent, the student's parents, and only school personnel necessary to "implement the discipline and intervention provided for in this policy." A first positive test would mean that the student would be placed on 20 days' probation from any extracurricular activity and would be encouraged to seek treatment and/or counseling. A second positive result in the same school year or any two consecutive school years would result in the student being suspended from any extracurricular activity for that school year and the next year. If a student gets a third positive test within two consecutive school years, he or she would be suspended permanently from any extracurricular activities while enrolled at the school. In other business, the School Board: * approved a $162,700 bid by OK Construction to replace windows at Highland View Elementary School; * agreed to negotiate a contract with Marion-based Spectrum Design to provide architectural services as needed for capital projects; * declared surplus five buses and two automobiles that either were too old, worn or damaged for further use by the school system; - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom