Pubdate: Sun, 12 Dec 2004 Source: Virginian-Pilot (VA) Copyright: 2004, The Virginian-Pilot Contact: http://www.pilotonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/483 Author: Darren Freeman, The Virginian-Pilot Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) DARE EDUCATION BOARD MEMBERS TO CONSIDER DRUG TESTING Most members of the Dare County Board of Education think too many students are using drugs, and a three-member committee will meet Tuesday night to begin considering random drug screening. Board members Joseph G. Farrow, Walter Holton, and Kirk "Skip" Saunders will form a committee to discuss imposing random drug testing for participation in high school sports, extracurricular activities and campus parking. Six of the seven school board members said a screening policy might help deter drug use, make schools and sports safer and help students who are abusing drugs. The committee will consider whether testing would be useful, how many students to screen, what drugs to test for and what to do when a student fails a screening. Public hearings could be held as soon as January, and board members are asking students, parents and staff to contact them with concerns and ideas. "Above all, I hope bringing this up has opened a dialogue," Saunders said. Board members stress that drug screening would add to existing anti-drug programs, which include curriculum-based awareness classes in middle school, free substance-abuse counseling and peer mentoring programs. Students who fail tests would not be disciplined, screening results would be confidential, and police would not be involved, board members say. Instead, students who fail drug screenings could be excluded from activities until they enter recommended treatment and educational programs. Board members Farrow, Holton, Sanders, Nicholas R. Nuzzi, Thomas Maher and Chairman David Oaksmith said the district could do more to prevent drug use, but they want to research the issue before imposing drug screening. Oaksmith said earlier this month that the entire board seemed to be in agreement. But board member Martin Booth said he wants to see proof that drug use is as severe as other board members contend it is. Booth said drug screening would invade students' privacy and should not be imposed unless the level of drug use justifies it. "We need to act like professionals, get the data and see what it tells us," he said. A district survey of students in 2000 found that the percentage of Dare County students who use drugs and alcohol tops national averages. Booth, however, said few students are caught with drugs when the sheriff's office runs unannounced searches of schools, lockers and cars with drug-sniffing dogs. This fall, the sheriff's office arrested four students at First Flight High School for marijuana possession and one at Manteo High School for heroin possession during a search at each campus, said Chief Deputy Phillip Etheridge. No drugs were found at Cape Hatteras Secondary School. Other board members said enough parents and students have asked the district to help reduce substance abuse that they feel compelled to act. "Whether we all want to admit it or not, this is a high drug-use county," Holton said. "Kids are very susceptible to peer pressure. I view drug testing as an opportunity to take that pressure off them. " Holton said drug testing would also prepare students for future careers that might require pre-employment or random drug screening. Still, all school board members say they are concerned that not many schools do drug screening and research is mixed on whether it keeps students off drugs. Some are also worried about how much it would cost. At least 14 of the state's 117 public school districts have random drug screening, according to a survey contracted by the district. Nationally, many districts have been considering drug testing in recent years, while the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that schools can test students who participate in activities that are considered privileges, such as sports, clubs and campus parking. The court has not yet considered whether a school could test an entire student body. For now, few parents seem concerned about drug testing, said Tammy Jennings, president of Manteo High's PTA. When parents gathered last month for a staff appreciation lunch, nobody brought up the subject, she said. School board members, though, have gotten a few calls and e-mails on the issue. Saunders said he has received fewer than 10 messages about drug screening. "We've gotten some feedback, some positive and some negative," he said. Parents who criticize the idea typically say drug testing would invade student privacy, board members said. Some students are making that argument, though most do not know the details about what the school board is considering, said Zach Wierzenski, a First Flight High School senior. Wierzenski, who said he does not drink or use drugs, is trying to organize students and teachers to oppose drug screening. He has put information on his personal Web site. He said drug testing would be an invasion and would not deter drug abuse. Dozens of students at First Flight High agree and are planning to protest if the policy is approved, Wierzenski said. Wierzenski said the district should instead shift its anti-drug education from middle school to high school. "The drug use is atrocious in Dare County. . . . It's an eerie presence that exists, but nobody wants to talk about it," he said. "The education needs to be in high school. You got to teach the kids who know what you are talking about, and the school isn't doing that." Nuzzi, though, said drug screening could be a valuable addition to anti-drug lessons. He said the district should consider drug testing because substance abuse is hindering education. "Our business is to educate our kids, and if they are under the influence and come to school with it in their system, they will not be prepared to learn," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek