Pubdate: Fri, 10 Dec 2004 Source: Royal Gazette, The (Bermuda) Copyright: 2004 The Royal Gazette Ltd. Contact: http://www.theroyalgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2103 Author: Pat Ferguson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) DRUGS IN SCHOOLS Dear Sir, I just finished reading Stuart Hayward's article in today's Bermuda Sun, on "drug-sniffing dogs in schools" and I found him to be a bit contradicting at times. To say that the issue is not one of clear right or wrong is sitting on the fence. If we have students bringing drugs to school, how can the issue not be clear? The student who had drugs at Mount Saint Agnes was not the first student to bring drugs to school, and that student will not be the last one. We live in a completely different society to what was when he and I went to school. We are now dealing with students who have a completely different mindset. I don't ever remember a student bringing a cigarette to school, let alone drugs =85 and if students are bringing drugs to school, yes, by all means have drug-sniffing dogs doing random searches at schools. Have we forgotten that these are the halls of learning for our leaders of tomorrow, and that they should be drug free? I frankly can't see how you can lose with random searches. I don't see any student bringing drugs to school when he or she does not have a clue when there is going to be a random search. It would be suicidal! I disagree with Mr. Hayward when he brings in the fear factor of the civil rights movements when dogs were set upon the civil rights activists, or that having drug-sniffing dogs in schools might reawaken too many painful memories with the image of leash-tugging dogs searching among children and their belongings. I think that is a bit dramatic, as these civil rights incidents took place 40 or 50 years ago, and I am sure that 99 percent (or any) of these students are emotionally tied to the civil rights movements or what happened back them. When I say that we should have drug-sniffing dogs in the schools, I am not talking about a 200-pound snarling, leash-tugging, German Shepherd, like the ones Mr. Hayward was depicting. I am talking about a cute little drug-sniffing dog that I saw on a TV programme some time back about drug-sniffing dogs at Miami Airport, and they were using a very small cute dog. This is the type of dog that they could use in the schools. A cute, friendly little dog that that is non-threatening, and can get the job done. We have joined the rest of the world, and obviously, the rules have changed. We are no longer the "Isle of rest"=85we have become the "Isle of unrest!" I agree with Mr. Hayward when he says that the PLP would do well to be less dogmatic about its position and that we need more flexibility from Government leaders, also, by the PLP adopting a rigidly defensive stance when there is no clearly definable reason, is neither constructive, nor, useful. As we know, drugs are in every corner of our society, so to eliminate the problem, I say use whatever means necessary, and if it means drug-sniffing dogs, then so be it! After the terrifying issue with Dr. Brockenbrough at the hospital, I would think that any person who has other people's lives in their hands, should be randomly drug tested as you never know who is using drugs. Mr. Editor, I still wonder why the PLP MPs never consented to a random drug test as the opposition did. If I were a sitting MP, I would take a text in a minute. What was that saying? Lead by example? Pat Ferguson Warwick - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin