Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jul 2004 Source: Joplin Globe, The (MO) Copyright: 2004 The Joplin Globe Contact: http://www.joplinglobe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/859 Author: Jeff Wells WEBB CITY SCHOOL BOARD EYES DRUG-TESTING PLAN Committee will decide what drugs to test for, punishments WEBB CITY, Mo. - Parents, students, and coaches Tuesday night showed support for a plan to introduce drug testing for some students at Webb City High School. The Webb City R-7 School Board, during its regular monthly meeting, endorsed a request from Randy Richardson, district activities director, to form a committee to explore random and with-cause testing for high school-students who participate in sports, clubs, and other activities or have parent consent. The board would have to approve the committee's recommendations before testing would begin. "The reason we want a drug-testing program here at Webb is to give kids the ability to say 'No,'" Richardson told the board. Several students and parents backing the proposal attended the meeting. Three students and a parent voiced their support. "I think it is a good idea because it gives you an excuse, but I still have some questions - like how do they pick the students and what the punishments are," said Brayton Rand, a high-school junior who plays football, basketball, and tennis. Students and parents would have to sign a form consenting to random drug testing prior to participating in the activity, Richardson said. Parents of students who do not participate in activities could voluntarily participate, he said. The school may also ask for tests of eligible students with "reasonable suspicion," he said. The urine test would be administered at the school by a private company and would screen for cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana, morphine, and other drugs, Richardson said. The committee, which will consist of parents and coaches, is to decide what the tests would cover and punishments, Richardson said. The committee may decide to include alcohol in the screening, but the latency for alcohol is shorter than for other drugs, he said. Zeke Tarrant, a high-school junior who plays football and swims, was among the students in favor of the plan. "We are all about tools for the kids," said his father, Greg Tarrant. "It can obviously help the kids in a decision-making process, and a parent or a coach can't be there all the time and it is something they can pull out of their toolbox and use. That is why we are supporting it." Superintendent Ron Lankford said Webb City is considering adopting drug testing because it is already in several other area schools and because the U.S. Supreme Court, in a June 2002 decision, allows schools to test students in non-athletic activities in addition to sports. Webb City is reviewing plans already implemented in Carthage, Carl Junction, Marshfield, and Nixa. "I think that as coaches and as sponsors we are definitely in favor of implementing some type of a drug-testing policy," said football coach John Roderique. "I think we've got the same problems that other communities have, and I think we need to start dealing with it." The tests would cost about $16.25 each, Richardson said. Testing would be conducted twice a month with samples collected from about 15 students during each testing period, he said. The cost of testing 270 students at $16.25 a test would be $4,387.50. The district would pay for the testing out of a federal Drug Free School and Community grant that the district already receives, Lankford said. The district would shift funding from some elementary-level drug-prevention programs to drug testing, he said. Board members Dave Collard, Ron Oney, Jeanne Newby, Lucinda Copeland and Terry James attended the meeting. Board President Will Roderique and board member Kent Taylor were absent. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh