Pubdate: Thu, 21 Jul 2005
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Copyright: 2005 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper
Contact:  http://www.chron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198
Author: Jason Spencer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)

FIRED CROSSING GUARD GETS SHOW OF SUPPORT

Parents Want Hisd To Rehire 79-Year-Old Who Was Terminated For Refusing 
Drug Test

School crossing guard Francis Light said he didn't know what to think one 
morning last month when a woman approached him at his post outside Oak 
Forest Elementary School and asked for a urine sample.

"I've been doing this school job for about 16 years, and I never heard of 
anyone taking a drug test, at least the crossing guards," said Light, 79. 
"Most of us are old people anyways."

So he refused.

"About two hours later, when I got back home, they called and told me I was 
terminated," Light said. "They told me I had 10 days to turn in my 
equipment -- you know, a stop sign, raincoat, stuff like that."

He shouldn't have been surprised, said Terry Abbott, a Houston Independent 
School District spokesman.

"Every employee understands if you refuse the drug or alcohol test, you are 
automatically terminated," Abbott said. "We cannot allow people who are 
responsible for children's safety to refuse to take a drug or alcohol test."

Light signed a form acknowledging as much in September.

"They give us rules and regulations, and every year they get thicker and 
thicker," said Light, an Air Force veteran of World War II. "I don't know 
if I ever read them."

Light said he drank his last beer 51 years ago and has never used illegal 
drugs. He would have submitted to the drug test, he said, except he 
couldn't find any Oak Forest administrators to tell him it was required.

"My nurse, my secretary, my principal -- nobody was there," Light said. "I 
didn't have anybody there to talk to, and I didn't know who this lady was."

Now, some Oak Forest parents are lobbying the school district to give Light 
a second chance.

"This is just one of those situations where a better look at what's going 
on would serve everyone well," said parent Jim Capfer. "I trust my kid's 
life with this man."

About 30 parents have come out in support of Light so far, Capfer said.

But HISD can't make an exception for Light, Abbott said, even if Light has 
a perfect work record.

"It would completely destroy our ability to keep children safe if we 
allowed people to refuse the drug or alcohol test," he said.

Light said he understands what's at stake. He was on duty April 14 when 
fifth-grader Anthony Dwight was struck and killed by a vehicle while riding 
his bike just beyond Light's crosswalk.

"It's still bothering me a lot," Light said. He remembers Anthony as the 
boy who often offered to sing him the songs he'd learned that day in 
school. "I think I lost 5 pounds that week."

While he'll miss the $250 checks he received every other week from HISD, 
Light said it's the relationships with the students he'll miss the most.

"I made a lot of friends over at that school," he said. "They're all good 
people and all good kids."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom