Pubdate: Wed, 09 Jun 2004 Source: Birmingham Post-Herald (AL) Copyright: 2004 Birmingham Post Co. Contact: http://www.postherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/46 Author: Nick Beadle Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) STUDENT DRUG TESTING SUPPORTED Select groups of Clay-Chalkville High School students are one step closer to mandatory drug testing after a Jefferson County Board of Education committee recommendation Tuesday. The matter now goes to the school board for a vote. The board's instructional services advisory committee recommended approval of the pilot program, which if approved by the full board would test students participating in sports and other extracurricular activities such as band and Scholar's Bowl. Students seeking to park on school property would also be tested. Students who do not drive to school or participate in extracurricular activities will not be forced to participate in the drug testing. Local opposition to the proposal has been noticeably absent. But the American Civil Liberties Union opposes the idea, said Anjuli Verma, a spokeswoman for the ACLU Drug Policy Litigation Project. Verma said suspicionless drug testing policies are demeaning to students and force them to prove their innocence. "From a policy standpoint, with the other things available for funding, it's interesting that schools choose to implement such policies," she said. Without discussion, the recommendation was approved by the instructional committee. But board member and committee chairman Tommy Little said most of the discussion came when Clay-Chalkville Principal Randle Cassady proposed the policy last month. Cassady declined to comment on the details of the drug testing proposal until the board votes, which Little said would likely be June 21. Testing may be done before a student begins an activity or receives parking privileges and will be conducted at random times afterward. First-time offenders - those who test positive for drugs - would be immediately suspended from extracurricular activities and/or parking on school grounds, the proposal says. Additionally, they will serve a two-week suspension from activities and/or parking, undergo six hours of drug counseling and be subject to follow-up tests for at least one year. Second-time offenders will have those suspensions extended for the remainder of the school year. Jefferson County Superintendent Phil Hammonds said the proposal is a proactive attempt by Clay-Chalkville and its community to deter young people from drug abuse. But, he insisted, the level of abuse is no more prevalent than at any other school. No board or school money would be spent to enact the Clay-Chalkville policy, Board of Education spokeswoman Nez Calhoun said. She said all funds will come from the city of Clay and grants. The program's cost has yet to be determined, Clay Mayor Charles Hart said through a spokeswoman. Board of Education officials interviewed Tuesday said they were not aware of the cost involved with the drug testing proposal. Verma said schools have been creating "coercive situations" by making drug testing a requirement for parking and extracurricular activities, which she said is linked to college admission. Students in some extracurricular activities, like chess clubs and Scholar's Bowl teams, are the least likely to use illegal drugs, she said. But Little, who doubles as president of the Clay-Chalkville Parent Teacher Student Association, said he believes athletes should not be singled out for testing. He said the prevalence of collegiate and professional athletic testing is not relevant to the school's situation. "The whole issue is for intervention - early intervention," Little said. "It's not trying to punish." ACLU's Verma provided an April 2003 study from the Journal of School Health that studied drug testing policies' effectiveness as a deterrent. It found only 18 percent of 722 schools surveyed conducted screenings from 1998 to 2001. "While lack of evidence for the effectiveness of drug testing is not definitive, results suggest that drug testing in schools may not provide a panacea for reducing student drug use that some - including some on the Supreme Court (in two cases since 1995) - had hoped," the study concludes. The study also shows policies that address attitudes, values and perceptions of drug use may be a more effective deterrent than drug testing. Verma said the counseling required for first-time offenders of the proposed policy is a step in the right direction. "That's a start, but (testing) without any suspicion whatsoever is still a waste of money," she said. But both Hammonds and Little said the Clay-Chalkville policy's effectiveness can only be determined next spring when the pilot program would be reviewed. "It may not be perfect, but it's a step in the right direction," Little said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh