Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jan 2006 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2006 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Deborah Hirsch Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) A SNIFF FOR SAFE SCHOOLS Random Checks Using Dog Aims To Keep Drugs, Guns Off Campuses In Fort Mill Tosca, a 5-year-old Belgian Malinois, trots around cars parked in the Fort Mill High School student lot, her nose pushed against the sides of the vehicles. She holds back at one sedan, circling by the door. Then, after a few more good sniffs, she looks up at her handler and sits down. That's her alert signal. Tosca has been trained to recognize the scents of gunpowder and all sorts of drugs -- and she smelled something suspicious here. Forty-one school districts across the Carolinas and other states pay R.A.I.D Corps Inc., a Spartanburg-based private drug inspection company that owns Tosca, to check their buildings. Fort Mill started using R.A.I.D. in the 2004-05 school year, paying about $400 per school per search -- a total of $11,500 over the school year -- to randomly check for illegal substances in the high school and both middle schools. York principals will consider adding the service at a meeting in February, new Superintendent Russell Booker said. "Having that added piece of security is well worth the money that you're spending," said Booker, who saw the company in action when he was a principal in a Spartanburg district. "It's another preventative measure to try to keep those things out of your school that don't need to be there." Last Friday, Fort Mill High administrators asked R.A.I.D. inspector Joel Raines to go through a random row of the parking lot since he'd gone through classrooms last time. "We try not to have a pattern, because the more patterns we have, the easier it is to avoid it," Raines explained. The company doesn't even tell administrators what day they're coming. (Raines coordinated with the Observer ahead of time so a reporter and photographer could be there.) Tosca zoomed through the row of 41 cars in 15 minutes, alerting four times. Raines waited as the assistant principals tracked down the owners of the cars, explained what happened and escorted them outside -- one by one to protect confidentiality -- to open the car. The students can request to have their parents there, but they can't refuse to let Raines search it. Under school policy, once a car is on school property, it's subject to search. The same goes for lockers and book bags. (On Friday, before coming to the high school, Tosca alerted on one book bag in a classroom at Fort Mill Middle, but Raines didn't find anything.) Car No. 1: Maybe some burns from marijuana smoked in the car at some time, but no drugs. Car No. 2: No drugs found, but there could've been something in the dried-up leaf bits on the carpet floor. Car No. 3: No drugs found. Car No. 4: No drugs, but another serious offense - -- a bottle of gin. Tosca doesn't alert on alcohol, but that doesn't mean she was wrong about drugs in any of those cars, Raines said. She may have picked up on marijuana seeds that burned into upholstery, or a lingering scent from a drug user who rode in the car, he said. R.A.I.D. dogs commonly find fireworks, weapons and drugs, Raines said. They've also found a miniature bomb made from a plastic pipe, he said, and a half-ounce of marijuana in a teacher's car -- neither in Fort Mill. Even if nothing illicit is found, Fort Mill principals still call home to tell parents about the alert. If they do find drugs or alcohol, the student is expelled unless administrators grant a waiver. Students who receive waivers still have to serve 10 days of suspension. They also have to pay to go through a substance-abuse evaluation and whatever program the evaluators recommend. The alcohol hit Friday was the first at Fort Mill High this academic year. Last year, the program uncovered seven cases of illegal substances at the high school, which Raines said was typical compared to other districts. Fort Mill Principal David Damm said the deterrent effect is worth the cost of the program. "Drugs and alcohol are a problem in society," he said, "so they're going to be an issue at the school." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman