Pubdate: Tue, 04 Oct 2005
Source: Columbian, The (WA)
Copyright: 2005 The Columbian Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.columbian.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/92
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

SENDING A MESSAGE

Drug-sniffing dogs are coming to the Evergreen District's high schools to 
root out illegal substances in lockers and cars.

Here's a cheer for the effort, and here's hoping the dogs don't find a 
thing. That would make school administrators perfectly happy.

The program, which was vetted during months of decision-making and 
preparation, will be explained to students at each of the district's high 
schools this week. While the Vancouver Police and Clark County deputies who 
bring the dogs will be prepared to make arrests, the primary goal is to 
keep drugs way from schools altogether, more than it is to nab users on 
school campuses. And that, for the most part, is fine with "clean" 
students, who should not have to walk into a school restroom and find 
classmates smoking marijuana, or be witness to drugs changing hands in the 
parking lot.

We don't buy the American Civil Liberties Union's stance that such searches 
are "heavy handed" and are tantamount to treating "students as suspects," 
as an ACLU spokesman in Seattle told The Columbian's Howard Buck.

We wonder if ACLU officials, or any other critics of the drug-sniffing-dogs 
program, consider it "heavy handed" to be required to pass through a metal 
detector before boarding a plane? Isn't it better to require that procedure 
for everyone in hopes of deterring or discovering contraband that could 
threaten the safety of all on board?

Likewise, drugs on campus are a threat to the learning environment and 
safety of all students, as well as other motorists and pedestrians who 
might become victims of drug-impaired drivers en route to or from high school.

Evergreen's program is apparently the first such ongoing effort in Clark 
County, although drug-sniffing dogs have been brought into some high 
schools on a spot basis in the past. There are numerous districts around 
the country where dogs are used to sniff out drugs. In some, there have 
been complaints and even legal action. But it appears those cases stem from 
instances of dogs sniffing out students themselves and/or backpacks in the 
students' possession, with no clear reason to suspect drugs. In Evergreen's 
case, that concern should be a nonissue because the dogs will check out 
unattended lockers and cars.

In the end, as Evergreen Deputy Superintendent John Deeder, said, " We will 
send a strong message that we will have zero tolerance for drugs in our 
schools."

The TV ads say, "Talk to your kids about drugs." This is the school 
district, and by extension the public, talking to the students, and their 
message is a good one.
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D