Pubdate: Wed, 31 Mar 2004 Source: Portsmouth Herald (NH) Copyright: 2004 Seacoast Newspapers Contact: http://www.seacoastonline.com/news/index.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1157 Author: Joe Adler PARENTS FIRM ON PHS DRUG ISSUE PORTSMOUTH - A group of about 50 parents Tuesday night shared poignant stories of their children's struggles with drugs and urged the Portsmouth School Board and administration to take action in enforcing a drug policy at Portsmouth High School that students will respect. "My hope is that, after today, we won't have to have another meeting again," said parent Bob Montville, who organized the meeting at the Comfort Inn to bring the issue of drugs at PHS further out in the open one week after the board held its own meeting to address the issue. Montville expressed his hope that attention would be diverted from himself following his criticism of the School Department regarding the alleged inconsistency in how students are disciplined for drug offenses. His criticism caused ire among board members. He delivered the message, however, that the administration should work to eradicate the drug problem in the school, which administrators have said does not exceed that of other schools. "We hear that Portsmouth is no different than any other school. I don't want them to treat our school as just average," Montville said. Jack Anderson, a parent of a PHS student who has fought addiction, said his son has spoken about the ease with which students have used drugs inside the school. "In the bathrooms, in the woods behind school, they're using drugs. Vicodin, Prozac, Zoloft - prescription drugs are being sold to students who don't have a prescription," said Anderson, whose son is now seeking treatment. "He's been sober for four months. It's almost like we have a new son." Parent Robin Bianchi expressed frustration at how her son was punished for violating the school's athletic contract, compared with how others, she said, were punished for a similar offense. When Bianchi learned of her son's offense, she ordered him to tell the football coach that he had violated the school's athletic contract. He confessed without the school needing to investigate and was removed from the team. "The response," said Bianchi, "was, 'We have a zero-tolerance policy. It's black and white.'" But Bianchi alluded to the policy as being "gray," explaining that when her son's friends were arrested during baseball season, they were suspended for five games with the privilege of sitting on the bench in uniform. "Inconsistency is the backbone of resentment," she said. Brian Berry, a former Rye School Board member, told the audience how the school's punishment of his son worked for the better. His son was suspended from school and as well as the football team for drinking outside a school dance. According to Berry, his son got the message loud and clear, and shaped up. "He had a brand on him because of the mistake he made," Berry said. John Welch, who has helped start a subgroup of the Parent Teacher Student Association that focuses on drug prevention, credited first-year PHS principal Forrest Ransdell with "doing a good job up to this point." But Welch urged the audience to keep applying pressure to force the administration to think about better enforcement. "We need to get you people in front of the School Board," he said. Welch said the school will only bring in drug-detecting dogs - which the administration says it is now considering despite earlier trepidation - if "we keep the pressure on." Former athletic director Andrea Ogden, whose position was cut at the end of last year, presented the parents with a blueprint of an athletic policy she had proposed to the School Board's athletic subcommittee. The current policy is strict, but according to some, not properly enforced. Ogden's plan was for a three-strike policy, which she said is clear, straightforward and has been used in other school districts. "I asked them to present it to the board," said Ogden. "Nothing happened." School Board members were invited to the meeting but declined the invitation, claiming that a state law requiring a public announcement of a 'quorum' of the board prohibited them from attending. However, board member Nansi Craig was in attendance, although she said she came "as an observer" and declined to comment about the meeting. Police officials were also asked to come, but they stayed away as well. The meeting concluded with the parents listing a set of action items that they want to see implemented by either the School Board or the administration. The items included a definite time line on bringing the drug-sniffing dogs into the schools, an explanation of what a zero-tolerance policy means, a time line on changes to the athletic contract and a stated opinion of the drug policy from all members of the School Board. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake