Pubdate: Wed, 13 Apr 2005 Source: Terrace Standard (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Terrace Standard Contact: http://www.terracestandard.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1329 Author: Dustin Quezada SCHOOLS TARGET DRUG ACTIVITY Local school district administrators will have expanded rights to search students for illegal drugs come September. Under new policy guidelines, school administrators, with reasonable grounds to be suspicious, will be able to search students, their lockers and their vehicles. The Coast Mountains School District's board of trustees approved the new policy, applicable to secondary students, on April 6. The new policy formalizes informal procedures already in place and adds new ones. Caledonia Senior Secondary vice principal Keith Axelson said administrators will depend upon a lot of sources when determining searches based on reasonable grounds. "A search would be conducted if it was reasonable to suspect possession," he said. "It could come from a report from a student or parent, such as a smell (of drugs) or a witnessing of activity." Student searches, allowed only on school property, are not part of the present regulation, though Axelson said they were performed occasionally. Vehicle searches, also legal only on school grounds, is new to the policy and also subject to suspicion on reasonable grounds. According to Axelson, who has worked at Caledonia since May 2004, there have been no incidents at the school where vehicles have been searched. "As long as protocol is followed, it gives us another tool to help," he said, adding he's in favour of the new measures. All secondary students will now have to sign a rental agreement with conditions of use for their lockers. Lorrie Gowen, the school district chair, says the form, standard in B.C., covers any possible legal issues of student privacy. She said lockers were determined to be private property. "But they're not renting the locker, they're renting the lock," she said. "That's how we got around that." The district will continue to have the right to perform random locker searches with dogs trained to sniff drugs, if necessary. The B.C. Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) has fought against similar measures introduced in the Abbotsford school district. Micheal Vonn, of the BCCLA, said that boards are intruding on students' right to privacy and that enforcement should take a secondary role to treatment. While privacy versus safety is a big issue, Gowen said the board has sided with the overall safety of all students. As for treatment of students with drug problems, Axelson says his school offers counselling that focuses on awareness and prevention, directing students to available resources. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin