Pubdate: Tue, 30 Mar 2004 Source: Portsmouth Herald (NH) Copyright: 2004 Seacoast Newspapers Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1157 Website: http://www.seacoastonline.com/news/index.htm Author: Joe Adler NO POLICE PRESENCE AT DRUG MEETING PORTSMOUTH - Wanting to stay out of a "local political issue," state police have turned down a request to send a K-9 officer and drug-detecting dog to tonight's parents meeting regarding the Portsmouth High School drug policy. "This issue was examined to be a local political issue between the School Board and this parents group," said Lt. David Kelley of the New Hampshire State Police Troop A. "It's best dealt with at the local level." Parents requested the dog come to the 7 p.m. meeting at the Comfort Inn on Lafayette Road for a demonstration on how it is used to search for drugs in schools. The School Board held a public meeting last week to address concerns about the school's drug policy. Organizer Bob Montville tried for weeks to get Portsmouth police to attend with one of their dogs which the school district has talked about using at the high school. That request was denied by the Police Commission. John Kelley, the commission's chairman, said last week attendance by police officials at the meeting "would not be productive." "Why can't they educate us?" said Montville. "We're taxpayers. Our kids are in the schools." Montville's criticism of the school system for alleged inconsistency in prosecution of students for drug offenses has been met with displeasure by School Board members. "I just don't think there's any point to it," said board member Ann Walker of the meeting. "We've already heard everything he's had to say over and over again." Walker added her praise for last week's public meeting which, she said, gave concerned parents an understanding of the school's drug and alcohol policy. "I don't think there's anything more to hear," she said. The full board will not be present tonight because of a state law prohibiting more than four members from attending a meeting that is not publicly posted. Individual board members can attend as long as their number does not exceed four. The one city official known to be attending is City Councilor Laura Pantelakos, who has criticized both the board and Police Department for not attending the meeting. "I'm really disturbed that the police department won't be there," Pantelakos said "The people that will be there pay for the dogs to be at the (Portsmouth) police station." Commissioner Kelley was unaware of the state police's decision Monday. "My understanding is that the state police is going to bring a drug dog to discuss how they operate, but there will be no discussion with respect to their use in the Portsmouth schools," the commissioner said. "(Portsmouth police) want to be able to demonstrate the capability of the canine group at any particular time, but we feel that this particular meeting is not something that we want to participate in." At the public meeting, Superintendent Lyonel Tracy reversed the district's stance - expressed in comments by Assistant Superintendent Robert Lister - that drug sweeps by dogs would be too intimidating. "We are right on schedule to have dogs in the schools," Tracy said. Rodney Rodriguez, a parent planning to attend tonight, invited an officer he knows from Massachusetts who offered to bring a dog from his unit. That effort was also denied. Rodriguez said that if he went to the police station on his own to ask about drug prevention, no one would stop him. "But because we're a group of concerned citizens, they think it's some kind of politics that they don't want to be involved in," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake