Pubdate: Wed, 24 Mar 2004 Source: Garden City Telegram (KS) Copyright: 2004 The Garden City Telegram Contact: http://www.gctelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1476 Author: J.J. Hensley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) DRUG-TESTING OPTIONS, COST STILL QUESTIONS FOR USD 466 Two months after the Scott City board of education started discussing a drug-testing program for students in the district, two fundamental questions remain: Who will be tested, and how much it will cost the district? District officials said they expect to have these questions resolved in time to put the program in place for the next school year. When the testing program was proposed in January, concerns were raised about testing only those students involved in extracurricular activities, a selection process for testing students that courts have consistently upheld. Scott City residents and parents have said testing only those students might target a particular group while overlooking another, said USD 466 Board of Education member Marvin Zorn. At last week's board of education meeting, committee members investigating the policy proposed a version that would allow parents to voluntarily enter their students' in the testing program. During the fall semester, about 215 of the 330 students enrolled at Scott Community High School were involved in extracurricular activities. Another option the district is exploring was having a voluntary testing program for the entire student body that would allow parents to decide whether they wanted their students to participate. The board formed a committee following the January meeting to investigate the options for implementing the program, but Athletic Director John Kern, the committee's chairman, said the committee had met one time and that his main concern was funding the program. "Each sport has a certain budget," he said. "If we have to cut back on that to pay for testing, that's my concern." The committee is scheduled to meet again April 7, Kern said, this time with representatives from Sport Safe, an Ohio-based testing company that assists districts with setting up testing programs. Scott City Superintendent Dean Katt said that while the program's cost was a concern, it is something the district could control based on the number of students tested. "We're not going to let that hold us back," Katt said, adding that the district is researching grant options to off-set some of those costs. If the district were to only test those students involved in extracurricular activities, the costs would be between $5,500 and $6,500, annually. Zorn said those costs could end up being passed on to taxpayers in Scott City because the district funds extracurricular activities with tax dollars to ensure every student can participate who wants to. If the tests were limited to those students in extracurricular activities, he said, the district would have to ask those parents or the taxpayers to foot the bill. "How can we alleviate passing this burden on to families," Zorn asked. The answer to that question, he said, was ensuring that the district and the testing program had broad-based community support. "We want to keep the support of the entire community in this process," Zorn said. "It's a pretty broad situation you get into when you're setting up something like this." So far, the community's response has been mixed, Zorn said, with some wondering if the district is going too far with the proposal and others wondering if the testing program goes far enough. Neither side has been particularly vocal, he said. Zorn said he expected the research committee would give the board a report at its next meeting, April 19, so the board could begin work on a resolution to make sure the program is in place by the beginning of the 2004 fall semester. Even then, he said, the initial version of the testing program might not resemble the finished product. "Phasing it in is another option," he said. For example, during the first year, the district could test only students in extracurricular activities. "If that works well, and there's no negative feedback, we can phase it into the whole school," Zorn said. Other districts have had success using a similar method, and this would allow districts more time to keep an eye on pertinent court cases, Zorn said. "There are a couple of cases pending," he said. "When those are all settled, I think it will come out in favor of (broad-based) testing because it needs to be done, just basically for some of the things that have happened around the country." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom