Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jul 2004 Source: North County Times (CA) Copyright: 2004 North County Times Contact: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: David Fried Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) WYLAND OPPOSING DRUG TEST BAN NORTH COUNTY ---- A bill moving through the state Legislature that would ban random drug testing programs at California schools has drawn adamant opposition from a North County assemblyman. The bill would prohibit schools from testing students for drugs and alcohol without "reasonable suspicion." Assemblyman Mark Wyland, R-Escondido, said last week that he believes legislators should not be dictating how school districts confront drug abuse and that random drug testing is simply a tool that should be available. "This really is something that ought to be dealt with on a local level," Wyland said. The bill's author, state Sen. John Vasconcellos, D-Santa Clara, said he believes allowing school districts to do random testing accomplishes little. "Learning occurs best in a safe environment and random drug testing does nothing to make school a safer environment," said Vasconcellos, author of Senate Bill 1386 and chairman of the Senate's Education Committee. Vasconcellos added that the bill would not alter existing programs for voluntary drug-testing, which generally require parents' and students' consent. Vasconcellos said the Bush administration is trying to "bribe" the public with a $25 million initiative to promote drug-testing programs in the nation's schools and that his bill would prevent California schools from being tempted by that money. At an Assembly hearing last month, an official from the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy advocated random testing as an effective public health tool. Whether the bill ultimately passes the Assembly and is signed into law by the governor may not affect local schools all that much. At present, none of the school districts in North County practices any type of drug testing. However, from the fall of 1997 until the summer of 2003, the Oceanside Unified School District randomly tested its high school athletes and cheerleaders for the presence of controlled substances from marijuana and amphetamines to steroids. Last school year, district officials decided the program was too expensive and stopped performing the tests, which were conducted by a private laboratory and cost about $15,000 a year. Nevertheless, district officials contend the program was successful while it lasted and the district's superintendent sent a letter to the governor last week expressing the district's "unequivocal opposition" to the bill. Joe Farley, Oceanside Unified's deputy superintendent, said he believes that at least a few students who knew they could be tested at any time abstained from drugs for that reason. District officials estimated that less than 1 percent of students who were tested came back with positive test results, while others simply left their sports programs rather than submit to the tests. Other superintendents and district officials said their districts did not have and were not considering any type of drug testing. Only the Poway Unified School District in recent months has discussed the issue. This spring, a local city councilman pitched the school board his plan to implement a voluntary program to test students for drugs and alcohol, the cost of which would be shared between the city and the parents. But most district administrators said the issue was simply not on their radars. "My general sense is that they've (drug testing programs) fallen by the wayside over the past several years," said Escondido Union High School District Superintendent David Hughes. The bill passed the Senate earlier this year 27-10. The Assembly could vote on it sometime in August. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin