Pubdate: Fri, 02 Jan 2004 Source: Alliston Herald (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/sc/alliston/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2224 Author: Ian M. Duff DRUG SEIZURE MADE HIGH SCHOOL RAID WORTHWHILE I suppose that the next commentary from Steven J. Day should be entitled "Safe Highways Act is a way to forego driver's rights" as he takes aim at those roadside RIDE programs that the police set up. So many of us are "subjected to random interruption" in our traveling environment for a crack down of less than one per cent of drivers. I think that Day has the same mental attitude as those five others that thought they would take their chances. It seems that those five are a few grams short of a full load. Any amount of drugs seized makes the exercise worth it. Those students, as well as any other individual who chooses to sell drugs is well aware of the impact that getting caught will have on their lives, now and in the future. The students who voluntarily surrendered their drugs knew what would happen if they held on to them and were subsequently caught with them. Zero tolerance does work. Further on in his commentary, Day's illogical thinking continues to baffle me. He refers to the raid across the street one week earlier and stated that students still brought drugs to school and how that raid did not deter the drug dealers. Well my guess is that if another raid was to be held in January that even fewer students would hold onto their drugs and take a chance of getting caught and that even fewer would choose to bring them into the school after that. Those five will have their day in court; let them argue that they were not in possession of an illegal substance. The moment that someone -- anyone -- chooses to undertake an illegal act, whether it be selling drugs, driving after drinking too much, stealing, etc., then they have "checked their rights at the door". As a parent of two children who attended Banting I would never balk at such an action being taken. Nor would I every consider stooping to the U.S. mentality (as Steven J. Day seems to extol) of launching a lawsuit. The only winners are lawyers. Keep up the "joint operations," keep up the roadside RIDE program, keep up the pursuit of those who willingly choose to break the laws of our lands. Ian M. Duff, Everett - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom