Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jun 2003 Source: Enterprise-Journal, The (MS) Copyright: 2003 The Enterprise-Journal Contact: http://www.enterprise-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/917 Author: Matt Williamson, Enterprise-Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) MCCOMB SCHOOL BOARD PASSES DRUG TESTING POLICY All McComb students participating in school activities will now be required to submit to random screenings, according to a mandatory drug testing policy passed by the school board at its Tuesday meeting. Students involved in extra-curricular activities will be subject to drug testing. But the school can make any student - participating in extra-curricular programs or not - submit to a drug test if the student's parents or guardians sign a waiver. School officials said the policy is needed to create a safe environment for students, encourage students with addictions to seek help, reduce the likelihood of incidents happening on school grounds and prevent school property from becoming a place associated with drug use. The policy, which affects students in grades 5 to 12, comes after at least two disciplinary hearings held by the board last month regarding suspected drug use among students. "It is important for every student, as well as employee, of our school system to understand the dangers of drug and alcohol abuse," the policy states. Students face discipline for violating the drug testing policy by being suspended from school or from participating in school activities, or by having to undergo counseling. However, parents can opt to seek - and pay for - private counseling to avoid facing disciplinary action by the school board. No students testing positive for drugs will be penalized academically, school officials said. Students will be tested for amphetamines, marijuana, cocaine, opiates and phencyclidine or PCP through blood, breath, urine or hair samples. Their names will be selected at random. The school administration can recommend that students undergo counseling and rehabilitation following a positive test. "It is the belief of the board that the benefits derived from the policy objectives outweigh the potential inconvenience to students," according to the policy. Drug testing can be recommend for students who show tell-tale signs of being under the influence. School officials said teachers, coaches, band directors and other teaching personnel will receive a total of 120 minutes worth of training on recognizing the affects alcohol and various controlled substances. School staff that sees "observations concerning the appearance, behavior, speech or body odors of the students," can recommend drug testing. The drug policy also states that a student's drug use even when they away from school is a violation of the policy. "Students should realize that these regulations prohibit all illicit drug use - during and away from school activities," the policy states. The policy puts the burden on students to report to school officials what, if any, medications they are taking. Any information regarding a student's drug testing history shall not be made public unless the student authorizes the disclosure. The school district can retain test results that come back positive for drugs, those that have been tampered with or those substituted with someone else's sample for up to five years. It can also retain negative drug test results for one year. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake