Pubdate: Tue, 02 Mar 2004 Source: Times, The (Gainesville, GA) Copyright: 2004 Gainesville Times Website: http://www.gainesvilletimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2701 Contact: Jeff Gill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) HALL MULLS DRUG TESTING FOR ATHLETES The Hall County School System is looking at starting a drug-testing program, possibly in the fall and geared mainly to athletes. The Board of Education gave administrators the OK to continue exploring the idea Monday, after hearing a presentation from Gordon Higgins, the school system's director of community relations and athletics. "We need to send some kind of message that we don't want (drugs) in our schools," said board member Nath Morris. Higgins said the issue got started after Flowery Branch High School principal Mark Coleman called him and said some coaches had approached him with the idea. "There had been some talk in school about parties on the weekend, and they wondered what can we do to make a positive statement about saying no to drugs," he said. Hall County visited with White County schools officials, who started a voluntary program at White County High School about 1' years ago. "They recommend making (the program) voluntary," Higgins said. "If it's compulsory, it's inevitable you'll have lawsuits." White County applies the policy to students who compete in Georgia High School Association-sanctioned events, or mainly athletes. Some 200 students' parents have agreed to the testing, while six opted out, Higgins said. Three students ended up testing positive for drugs. Students who test positive the first time are placed in a counseling program. Also, they can remain on the team and participate in practices, but they cannot play in a game until they test negative, Higgins said. The parents of those three students "were in denial at first," he said. "They believed the tests had to be wrong." But then they "quickly became grounded in reality" once the results were explained further. "Because of the way this (program) has been approached, it has been widely accepted in the schools and the community," Higgins said. "... Parents want to be involved in their kids' lives." White County High has paid for the testing, which cost $7,000 in the first year. Hall school board member Lori Thompson said that if the program were voluntary in Hall, "some parents might be willing to pay (for the tests)." Board chairman Richard Higgins briefly raised the matter of whether to allow individual high schools to participate in the program. "I think we either do it (at all the schools) or we don't," Thompson said. She said believes the program would work well even for the students who test positive. "I think the whole approach is helping children. If we see they have a (drug) problem, we could get them some help." Higgins said the issue is set for further discussion at a high school principals meeting March 10. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk