Pubdate: Wed, 20 Apr 2005 Source: Burlington Times-News (NC) Copyright: 2005 The Times-News Publishing Company Contact: http://www.thetimesnews.com/letter_to_editor/splash.php Website: http://www.thetimesnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1822 Author: Mike Wilder Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) MOST OF BOARD FAVOR DRUG TESTING Mike Wilder Times-News Alamance-Burlington Board of Education members remain mostly supportive of a proposal to require drug testing for some high school students in the local system. None of the board's seven members, interviewed last week, said they are opposed or are leaning against voting for the proposal. "I think it's heading (toward approval)," said board member Mary Alice Hinshaw, "although I don't know if it will be unanimous or not." Hinshaw, who has voiced the most reservations about the policy, said she's still undecided and has wavered as the school board, system employees and the public have discussed drug testing. She said last week she is more inclined to support the proposal than she has been at some other points during the debate. The board will discuss the policy at its April 25 meeting. Under the procedures it uses to consider new policies, it could vote on the proposal that night, although board members said they may or may not make a decision then. The policy would require high school students who participate in extracurricular activities to agree to random drug testing. Students who test positive for drug use and whose test results are upheld would be suspended from activities for three months for a first offense. The second offense would mean suspension for a year, and a third offense would mean suspension for the rest of high school. Students who test positive would be required to get treatment if they wanted to regain eligibility for sports or other activities. The school system estimates drug testing would cost the system about $25,000 a year. Superintendent Jim Merrill has said the proposal is one result of an undercover drug operation in the system's high schools during the 2003-04 school year that resulted in the arrests of dozens of students on charges of dealing drugs. Hinshaw, a former teacher, said the drug operation shows a serious problem with drugs. "Had we not had that drug bust last year, I feel much more certain I would be against it," she said. Three board members - Hinshaw, Todd Baker and Steve Van Pelt - said the policy would likely give students a strong incentive to refuse to use drugs if their peers suggest it to them. "It gives students another avenue to turn down that peer pressure," Baker said. "That's what really strikes me about the policy." Most board members say the majority of comments they've heard about the proposal have been positive, with some mentioning margins of at least 3-to-1 or 4-to-1. The board's chairman, Tom Manning, and board member Jackie Cole are among the members who say the positive comments they have heard far outweigh the negative ones. At the last school board meeting, however, several people criticized the proposal or said they had serious reservations about it, while no one who spoke enthusiastically supported the proposal. The local NAACP has announced it opposes the proposal. Some school board members said that while they want to hear people's concerns, opponents of any kind of proposal tend to be more outspoken than people who support an idea. School board member Gayle Gunn said she has at times been frustrated at the lack of response to the proposal among some groups that are involved in the schools. Both Gunn and the school board's vice chairwoman, Brenda Brown Foster, said they tend to take silence as an indication of support for the policy. When she recently asked a group of parents if that were a valid assumption, Gunn said, "all the heads started nodding, 'yes.'" - --- MAP posted-by: Beth