Pubdate: Wed, 16 Mar 2005 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2005 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Todd DeFeo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) NO INPUT YET ON RANDOM DRUG SCREENS Commerce Schools COMMERCE - With little discussion and no input from parents, a proposal to give random drug tests to students in Commerce City Schools cleared its first hurdle Monday. The Commerce Board of Education could implement the policy at its April 11 meeting. School officials say there is not a drug problem within the 1,425-student school system; rather, the policy to randomly test students is meant to give kids an excuse to say no if pressured to use drugs. Students with privileges, even as common as driving to school every day, would be subjected to the random tests, and the privileges could be revoked if they test positive. "Anything you can do to deter it, you need to do," school board Chairman Arthur Pattman said. "You've got to try to stay ahead. You've got to put policies in place to protect these kids. That's all we're trying to do." Superintendent Larry White sent a letter to parents Monday informing them of the board's proposed drug-testing policy. No one spoke about the policy at Monday's meeting. Under the proposed rule, middle and high school students will be randomly selected by a third-party company, and a school nurse will use a swab to take saliva samples from students. Punishment escalates for each failed test. A first offense will land a student in a conference with his parents and a school staff member, such as the principal, in addition to drug counseling. A second offense will net a 45-day suspension from privileges, but the student can apply for reinstatement after he passes another drug test and participates in drug counseling. If a student fails a third drug test, he would lose privileges for a year, according to a draft of the policy. After the year, the student could participate again after he passed a drug test and completed a drug assessment or counseling program. "We're not throwing the book at kids," White said. "We're just trying to give a certain segment of kids an excuse to say no. Peer pressure is getting tougher all the time." School administrators will continue to count a student's failed drug tests through his or her middle school and high school careers, but violations would not carry over from middle to high school, according to the proposed policy. In creating the policy, school officials based their proposal on schools in Calhoun and Thomaston where similar policies are used. Among the drugs students would be tested for are alcohol, anabolic steroids, cocaine, marijuana and propoxyphene, a pain killer, according to a draft of the policy presented at Monday's board meeting. Under the policy, school officials could use any variety of test, including taking urine, tissue or hair samples. However, nurses will use swabs to collect samples from students, White said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth