Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 Source: Cape Cod Times (MA) Copyright: 2004 Cape Cod Times Contact: http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/72 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/bush.htm (Bush, George) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) SAY 'NO' TO DRUG TESTS Schools have enough to do without another layer of social engineering. If it was a serious proposal, not one of the politically useful but vague pronouncements in President Bush's State of the Union address, then we oppose spending $23 million to help schools run random drug tests on children. The administration's drug czar, John Walters, has been on a 25-city tour promoting the idea to school officials, mostly in big cities. That alone raises questions about the presumptions behind the plan (suburban kids don't use drugs?). We don't understand the intended purpose of the federal government helping probe and document the internal chemistry of children. True, you might find a little lawbreaker or two, who could then be shuffled off to the juvenile justice system. You might scare a few others into saying "no" when the joint comes around. You might be able to certify that your sports teams are free of drugs (though not the most common and most dangerous illegal teen drug - alcohol - and not, without costly and more specific lab tests, the performance-enhancing steroid group). Against these debatable gains must be placed the costs, both in dollars and in misguided energies and misplaced priorities. For starters, this is not as simple as urinating in a cup. It can't be done by the school nurse and a teacher's aide. To assure accurate results and avoid lawsuits over embarrassing mistakes it would require an iron-clad system of sampling, testing and reporting - a verifiable chain-of-custody for samples akin to that required in criminal cases. Big bucks. And who volunteered the public schools as foot soldiers in the War on Drugs? Schools have enough to do, and are being given more responsibilities by the president's No Child Left Behind law. It's certainly not the time to add another layer of specious social engineering. Make no mistake, we support rigorous academic testing and certifiable progress. We just wish the money matched the moralizing. Perhaps the $23 million could buy better textbooks or entice better-schooled teachers into the challenging job. While children in school have fewer rights to privacy than adults on the street, random testing veers dangerously close to unreasonable search as described in the Bill of Rights. Conservatives should join the ACLU in raising the alarm. And it's all such a waste. We would submit that chronic drug use is not the main reason children do not do well in school. Not even in the Top Ten. Lack of community and family support for academics, lack of real-world consequences for failure and lack of clear goals for being in school in the first place all rank higher. The most troubled schools are in troubled communities that have come unhooked from real job prospects or real participation in the larger American community. Children there need dream testing more than drug testing. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin