Pubdate: Thu, 27 Jan 2005 Source: Eagle-Tribune, The (MA) Copyright: 2005 The Eagle-Tribune Contact: http://www.eagletribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/129 Author: Shawn Regan STUDENTS REACT TO DRUG-TEST PROPOSAL HAVERHILL -- A controversial proposal to randomly test Haverhill High School students and athletes for drugs is drawing both ire and support from those most likely to be tested. "It's degrading that they would want to do that. They are treating us like we are all rowdy teenagers doing bad things," said student council president and swim team captain Christine Fitzpatrick, 18. "There are some jobs and some places where drug testing is required, but public school shouldn't be one of them. The students need to be shown more respect -- not less." Haverhill High football and track captain Chris Valaskatgis, 17, said he thinks random drug testing for student athletes and those involved in extracurricular activities has its merits, but said it would be a hard sell for students. "A kid on a sports team might not take a chance experimenting with drugs on the weekend if he or she thought they might get caught and kicked off the team," he said. "But I also don't think it's fair to be testing only athletes and other kids who are trying to get involved at school. That seems like discrimination. I'm also worried that it would only be used to threaten and punish kids." Tonight, School Committee member Scott W. Wood Jr. will ask his colleagues to form a task force to study drug use at the high school and develop a policy for randomly testing students in extracurricular activities such as athletics, drama and after-school clubs. Courts have ruled that schools may only test students who participate in extracurricular activities. Most School Committee members said they support a fact-finding task force but are not ready to back drug testing. Mayor James J. Fiorentini said he opposes both because he has seen no evidence that drug use is on the rise at the high school and because the city does not have the money to pay for testing. Since she is student council president, Fitzpatrick is also a nonvoting member of the School Committee. She said instead of testing students who participate in sports and extracurricular clubs, the city should be promoting those activities as a deterrent to drug use. Like Fiorentini, she does not believe drug use at the high school is on the rise. "I agree with the mayor," she said. "Where is the evidence (that drug use by students is increasing)?" Wood, who graduated from Haverhill High less than three years ago, said hard drugs such as heroin and Ecstasy are more available to students today than ever before. He bases his beliefs on his own experience at the high school and conversations he has had with law enforcement officials, high school students and recent graduates. He points to the 2003 Youth Risk Survey, which found that 49 percent of high schoolers have used marijuana and 17 percent have used hard drugs. Both numbers are up from the 2002 survey. The 2004 survey is due out within the next few weeks. Jill Carroll, a parent member of the high school site council who has a son on the soccer team, said she thinks it's a good idea to do a study of drug use at the high school. But she is not ready to support drug testing. Like Valaskatgis, she is concerned about how testing would be administered and how the results would be used. "I would be very concerned about who would be doing the testing and who would have access to the information," she said. "Every parent wants to do everything they can from keeping their children from using drugs, but I don't think a kid who tries pot once on the weekend should be thrown off the team and have their lives ruined." Carroll said she would worry that any information about a failed drug test would hurt a student's chances of getting into college or even end up in the newspaper. School Committee members Kerry Fitzgerald, Shaun Toohey and Robert Gilman said they intend to support Wood's proposal to form a task force of teachers, parents, students, School Committee members and law enforcement officials to study drug use at the high school. But they said they aren't ready to endorse drug testing. Toohey said he would have to be convinced parents want their children tested for drugs before supporting such a policy. Wood will make his presentation at tonight's meeting, which begins at 7 at City Hall. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)