Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jan 2004 Source: Surrey Now (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc., A Canwest Company Contact: http://www.thenownewspaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1462 Author: Marisa Babic Cited: Black Tower Investigations http://www.blacktowerpi.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/drug+dogs SNOOPS TO TARGET DRUGS, NOT KIDS Students who stash dope in their lockers and get busted by drug dogs won't necessarily be hauled away in handcuffs, says the director of a private investigations company that wants the Surrey school district's business. Margarett Donley, director of Black Tower Investigations, says her company's goal is to rid schools of illegal drugs and and not to punish teens caught with narcotics. "Our job is not to put kids in jail, our job is to get drugs out of school," said Donley. Donley, who bought her first drug dog based on the expectation the Surrey school district would approve a proposal to do random searches of lockers, says her company's only role would be to identify the presence of drugs. As part of the service, Black Tower Investigations would supply two dogs and handlers and a videographer. The team would walk the halls while the kids are in class and if a dog made a hit, he would indicate his discovery throughout a "passive alert," meaning he would sit down in front of the offending locker. Donley estimates it would take about an hour to search "an average size Surrey school" at a cost of $275 an hour. The dogs are trained to sniff out marijuana, crack, cocaine, heroin methamphetamines and ecstasy, and can detect as little as a third of a gram. Depending on the school district's policy, the principal would likely get stuck with the unpleasant task of dealing with the student caught with drugs in his or her locker. Donley says it would be up to the principal, based on the amount of drugs found, to decide whether to call the police or parents. Cathie Paton, a director of the B.C. Principals and Vice-Principals' Association, says the issue of drug dogs hasn't been discussed by the association. Paton, principal of Creekside elementary school, says she suspects principals would be assisted by a school liaison officer, a Surrey RCMP member, in the event of any searches and advised by the officer on how to deal with the student. Paton says the current policy is to call liaison officers whenever an issue may involve suspected criminal activity. The proposal to have drug dogs search school lockers has been slammed by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and others as an infringement on privacy rights. And even trustees who support the concept admit the issues surrounding Canadian constitutional rights are a legal tangle. Donley acknowledges the criticism but maintains there are many interpretations when it comes to the protection of rights. "My child has just as much right to go to a drug-free school as the next child who may want to take drugs into a school," Donley said, adding that she would have no problem with drug dogs searching lockers in her son's school. Donley also believes that expectations of privacy regarding lockers, which are school property, is limited. "These lockers belong to the school not to you. You are using these lockers and you don't have the right to put drugs into the school's lockers," she said. District staff has recently learned that the Surrey RCMP lacks the resources to partner with the school district to conduct searches of lockers. If trustees want to go ahead with the proposal, they would have to hire a private company to provide the service and pay for it out of the district's operating budget. Despite her obvious opportunity to gain financially, Donley says drug dogs are the right approach in helping rid schools of drugs. "It's a business opportunity for me, I don't deny that at all, but it's also a necessary service," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake