Pubdate: Sat, 14 Feb 2004 Source: Burlington Times-News (NC) Contact: 2004 The Times-News Publishing Company Website: http://www.thetimesnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1822 Author: Mike Wilder Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) PUBLIC SPLIT ON STUDENTS' PUNISHMENT Public opinion is split on how students arrested in an undercover drug bust in the Alamance-Burlington schools should be punished. Of 1,348 Times-News readers who responded to a poll that began Monday and concluded Friday, 30.3 percent said the students who were arrested should be kicked out of school for the rest of the year. That meant the toughest punishment was the most popular choice for poll participants. But the second most popular response was the most lenient: 28.4 percent said students should be punished by the courts, but receive no punishment from the school system. Fifty students in the school system were arrested Feb. 4 after an undercover operation that started last fall. They were charged with possessing and selling and delivering marijuana and various prescription drugs. Superintendent Jim Merrill has said alternative education will be provided for students who received long-term suspensions from school following the arrests. That is contingent on the students and the parents being willing to take part in a drug treatment program. Students who have prior drug offenses relating to the school system or who were already in an alternative education program won't be eligible to take part in the alternative program. Those students, he said, may be recommended for expulsion. Because the system's alternative high school, Sellars-Gunn Education Center, is full, the alternative program will be held at the system's offices on Ray Street in Graham. Among punishment choices listed in the Times-News poll: - - Four hundred and nine people, or 30.3 percent, said students should be kicked out of school for the rest of the 2003-04 year. - - Two hundred and ninety-four people, or 21.8 percent, said students should attend school at an alternative site for the rest of the year. - - Two hundred and sixty-two people, or 19.4 percent, said the students should be allowed back into classes and receive school punishment that doesn't interfere with class attendance. - - Three hundred and eighty-three people, or 28.4 percent, said the students should be allowed to return to school and be punished by the courts. The poll question was posted online on the newspaper's Web site at www.thetimesnews.com. Readers also had the option of returning a ballot that ran in the paper, which allowed them to include comments. One poll participant, who said the students should attend school at an alternative site, suggested that their punishment include substantial community service. "They also need to do some time," the reader said. Another reader, who voted for school punishment that doesn't interfere with class attendance, wrote, "I believe everyone is due a second chance if this is their first offense." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin