Pubdate: Sun, 17 Jul 2005 Source: New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung (TX) Copyright: 2005 Herald-Zeitung Contact: http://www.herald-zeitung.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3053 Author: Melissa Johnson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PARENTS WILL PLAY KEY ROLE IN TESTING PLAN Many parents are now aware that the New Braunfels Independent School District will be implementing a random drug-testing policy this school year. But what parents may not know is how the policy works, what rights they have to appeal a positive test result and who's going to foot the bill. Parents and students 18 years or older will be required to sign a consent form before they will be eligible to participate in competitive extracurricular activities or receive a parking permit. The forms and information about the drug policy will be distributed to seventh and eighth-grade students Aug. 5 and high school students July 27 and 28 as part of school registration. Assistant Superintendent Janet Patton said students who want to register for courses that fall under the competitive extracurricular activity category must sign and return a consent form before they will be allowed to enroll in the class. Parent orientation sessions will be held to explain the policy and review consent forms before the policy goes into effect. Patton said the times, dates and locations of the meetings have not been determined. The percentage of the student body and the number of testing times each year will depend on the number of participants and the NBISD Board of Trustees' year to year preferences. Students entered into the pool will be chosen for testing by computer-generated random selection based on a district provided list of all identified participants. The district has selected independent laboratory Pinnacle Medical Management to administer the tests and select the dates. Students who will be entered into the drug testing pool include students in grade seven through 12 who participate in competitive extracurricular activities, park on campus or who voluntarily enroll in the programs. "The neat part about voluntary enrollment is that the district is not notified of the results, and it is performed at no cost to the parent," Patton said. "The medical review officer reports the results directly to parent because this about the safety of the child and being proactive." Patton said students who were randomly selected for drug testing should not worry that their names would be announced over the intercom. A list of selected names will be given to administrators and students will be notified of their selection by a school official who will walk to the studentA's classroom and escort them to the on-campus testing area. Testing will be performed by urinalysis and monitored by an official of the same sex. Students will provide the urine sample in a closed stall and will not be directly observed while providing the sample. The specimen will be split into "AA" and "BA" samples in the event that a parent retest is requested. A preliminary positive result will be confirmed by a second test of the same specimen. The district can test for amphetamines, anabolic steroids, barbiturates, cocaine, LSD, marijuana, methadone, opiates and phencyclidine but will not test for alcohol. The eight-panel test will not include anabolic steroids except on a random basis. However, students will not be singled out for the steroid test on the basis of their involvement in sports or other activities. "It's completely random," Patton said. "If they say that they want every 10th test to be a steroid test then they could go down the list of student id numbers, pick one, and that student could be a debater." Patton said that the high cost of the steroid test made it impractical to administer to every student. The regular eight panel test costs $28 a student, while the steroid test costs an additional $180 per student. The district has set aside $50,000 from its annual budget to fund the testing. Alcohol was removed from the testing policy after the first reading of the draft. Pinnacle President and CEO Dr. Harvey Graves explained that the rate at which the body metabolizes alcohol makes testing for the substance impractical. "Alcohol metabolism in a matter of hours and unless the student drank right before school or at school there would not be a detectable amount," Graves said. "It takes the body one hour to metabolize each drink, so even if the student was drinking Sunday night it would not show up on Monday morning." If a student tests positive for any of the nine prohibited substances, the parent will be notified. Before officially reporting the result of the test as positive, a Medical Review Officer will discuss the test results with the parent to determine if there is a medical explanation for the positive result, such as prescription medication. If the medical explanation can be verified, for example by contacting a pharmacy or general practitioner, then the test result will be reported negative. Students without a medical explanation for a positive test may still appeal for a retest if they believe the results are incorrect. A request for a retest must be made to the designated school official in writing within 48 hours from the time the parent was first notified of a positive test result. A second test from the "BA" bottle of the specimen will be sent for retesting at the parent's expense. Consequences for positive test results include suspension from extracurricular competition and parking, substance abuse counseling at the parent's expense. Students must have a negative follow-up test before the student will regain competition and parking privileges. The district will provide a list of certified counseling alternatives on a sliding scale. A student's first positive drug test will suspended him from competition and parking for 15 days and require three hours of counseling and a negative follow-up result. A student's second positive test will lead to a 30-day suspension with six hours of counseling and a negative follow-up; the third will mandate a one-year suspension, 24 hours of counseling and a negative follow-up. Students who test positive a fourth time will be permanently suspended from participating in all competitive extracurricular activities and campus parking for the duration of his or her attendance in NBISD. Though the draft requires students be suspended from competition for their first three offenses, it allows the students to participate in extracurricular practices. In response to accusations that the district was being soft on suspensions and wasting district money on the program, Patton said that the policy was not designed to be punitive. "The biggest obstacle of this policy has been to communicate to people that because someone's test shows to be positive, it's treated under this policy not the Student Code of Conduct. They are not considered under the influence because this is a non-punitive intervention. "The student code of conduct addresses drug use on campus or at school functions. This policy is more about deterring students from the temptation of using drugs in a society where the pressures are mounting and can be overwhelming. We want to educate the students and parents of harmful effects of drug use and intervene prior to any damaging or irreversible effects," Patton said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth