Pubdate: Sun, 04 Apr 2004 Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) Copyright: 2004 PG Publishing Contact: http://www.post-gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/341 Author: Milan Simonich, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PENNSYLVANIA BUCKS DRUG-TEST TREND IN SCHOOLS Lack Of Money, Trampling Of Rights Cited Politicians from the Florida Everglades to the California coast are trying to test high school athletes for every drug from steroids to marijuana to cocaine. In this climate where urinalysis is becoming as common as freshman algebra, various Pennsylvania school districts have scaled down their drug-testing programs or eliminated them altogether. Lack of money and fears that random testing is trampling students' legal rights are the main reasons state districts are resisting the national trend. Belle Vernon, once stung by critics who said its football players were artificially muscular, used to test every athlete and cheerleader for steroids and recreational drugs. But Athletic Director Jim Bush said the tests cost over $100 apiece, so budget-conscious administrators shrunk the program to a fraction of its original scope. For legal reasons, the Franklin Regional and Canon-McMillan districts have stopped all drug tests that targeted students because they played sports or drove to school. Administrators believed they were violating a recent Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling that said schools cannot conduct "suspicionless" drug tests aimed at athletes, students in extracurricular clubs and those who hold campus parking permits. "We certainly had no evidence that those students were using drugs," said Canon-McMillan solicitor Francis DiSalle, who recommended that the district scrap drug tests that targeted entire groups. But a handful of other state districts, notably Seneca Valley and Delaware Valley, require drug tests of all students who go out for interscholastic sports. Delaware Valley, the district that was sued in the Supreme Court case, also mandates drug tests for every student who drives to school, as well as those in band, National Honor Society and every other club in which students participate voluntarily. Perhaps the only Delaware Valley students not being tested for drugs, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court said, were "slackers" who did not play a sport or join an activity. These uninvolved students may be more likely than athletes, debaters or musicians to use illegal drugs, yet they were not subject to providing a urine sample at school, the court said. Candis Finan, Delaware Valley's superintendent, said her district on the New York and New Jersey borders has found no court decision clearing the way for random drug tests of students who are not in sports or extracurricular activities. But, she said, U.S. Supreme Court decisions have decreed that student-athletes and those in activities can be tested en masse. Given those rulings, she said, Delaware Valley feels comfortable in targeting entire groups, especially athletes. "They are looked up to as the leaders of the school," Finan said last week. "We are going to hold them to a higher standard." Much of the district's drug-testing philosophy is based on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said athletes at Oregon's Vernonia High School could be randomly tested for drugs. But in that ruling, the court contended Vernonia student-athletes were "a major source of a documented and active drug problem." Pennsylvania's Supreme Court received no evidence of any drug problem in Delaware Valley, much less that boys and girls on athletic teams had trafficked in drugs. State Supreme Court justices upheld the lawsuit against Delaware Valley and sent the case back to Pike County Common Pleas Court for litigation. Despite the court's position that suspicionless searches are wrong, Delaware Valley has not changed any of its drug-testing policies, nor does it intend to, Finan said. She said the school board considers drug testing essential to keeping students safe and healthy. More important, Finan said, the district can document a drug problem, dating to the 1998 arrests of two students who were caught on campus with heroin. She said one was involved in extracurricular activities. Delaware Valley, 73 miles from New York City, has seen an influx of newcomers since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Given the growth and increasing big-city ties to the district, Finan said, the school board views drug testing as a means of "a village raising a child." "Parents like this program. The only complaint we've had is by the couple that sued us," she said. The complaining parents, Louis and Mary Ellen Theodore, challenged the drug-testing policy after it was implemented in 1998. One of their daughters had to give a urine sample because she was in the National Honor Society. The Theodores considered the drug-testing program intrusive and unreasonable. Their daughters both graduated from college before the state Supreme Court ruled against suspicionless searches last November. The Theodores decided Friday to withdraw their lawsuit, saying the cost of opposing a public school district with vast resources was prohibitive. Nonetheless, their lawyer, Robert Isseks, said Delaware Valley's random drug tests are on shaky ground. One Western Pennsylvania district, Seneca Valley, has embraced testing procedures similar to Delaware Valley's. Seneca initially spent $40,000 a year for drug tests of athletes and students who drove to school. It has added another $20,000 to the budget for urinalysis of students in certain extracurricular activities. "We have seen all types of students become involved with drugs," said Seneca school board president Dean Berkebile. "Some have argued that there is an undue focus on a certain group. I instead prefer to look at it as every student who is in the pool has the perfect excuse to stay away from drugs." Berkebile said he was aware that other districts had dropped drug testing because of the state Supreme Court's denunciation of suspicionless testing. "We have chosen to stay the course until a more definitive ruling is given," he said. For a time in the mid-1990s, Belle Vernon had Western Pennsylvania's most exhaustive high school drug tests, though only athletes and cheerleaders were subject to the scrutiny. Bush, the district's athletic director, said football coaches specifically asked for steroid testing because opponents had sniped about the size and strength of Belle Vernon's players. Bush said Belle Vernon was merely in one of those cycles where it had excellent athletes, some of whom would go on to play at the University of Michigan and the University of Pittsburgh. School board members liked the idea of steroid tests. They also authorized urine screenings for recreational drugs. But testing some 300 student-athletes and cheerleaders each year soon broke the budget, Bush said. Belle Vernon now randomly tests 5 percent of its athletes and cheerleaders for recreational drugs. A handful of those students also receive the more expensive test for steroids. Bush said Belle Vernon has not considered modifying its program since the state Supreme Court ruling. Athletes and cheerleaders have never resisted the tests, he said, but they occasionally wonder why they alone are singled out. The man who pushed for Belle Vernon's program, former football coach Gary Dongilli, now says it was a colossal mistake. "I'd never again advise a school system to do it," he said. "It became a political thing. There was supposed to be confidentiality with the testing, but there wasn't." Dongilli said at least one school board member gained access to test results and spread word about the findings throughout the town. He did not recall any positive tests for steroids, but said there were occasional instances in which athletes were found to have used recreational drugs. Bush said neither he nor anyone else in the district could comment on test results. The Derry Area district modeled its drug-testing program after Belle Vernon's. It also targets only athletes and cheerleaders. Dave McNichol, Derry's athletic director, said he was comfortable with randomly testing those groups. But, he said, in a rural area such as Derry, alcohol might be a bigger problem and could be going undetected. McNichol said Derry has had only three positive drug tests for 550 athletes and cheerleaders tested in five years. Greater political momentum for random testing of students, particularly high school athletes, exists in the Sun Belt. State legislators in California and Florida have introduced bills to add steroid testing to screenings for recreational drugs. Even with a state Supreme Court ruling, Pennsylvania districts are at odds over whether random tests are wise. Random testing was considered problematic enough for the Shaler Area School District to decide against it. North Hills has long had a drug-testing policy, but it does not target any group or use random tests. Rather, it tests only on the basis of suspicion, such as a student with slurred speech. Lawyers in the Franklin Regional district said suspicionless testing was struck down by the court. That led the school system to kill its random testing program before it was a year old, said Superintendent Pamela Pulkowski. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom