Pubdate: Sun, 01 Oct 2006 Source: Denver Daily News (CO) Copyright: 2006 Denver Daily News Contact: http://www.thedenverdailynews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4274 Note: The Independence Institute is a Colorado Libertarian think tank. It provides a weekly opinion piece for the Denver Daily News. DOING IT FOR THE CHILDREN The Drug War Against Local Control and Parental Responsibility Not long ago, about the time Republicans became a majority in Congress, many conservatives considered the biggest threat to family values to be a powerful and activist central government. There may soon come a day when conservatives wonder how federal laws passed to perpetuate the ever-failing drug war became a proxy war on parental authority and local government decision making. As an example, on Sept. 19 the House of Representatives passed H.R. 5295, the "Student and Teacher Safety Act of 2006." The act requires "each state, local educational agency, and school district" to implement a federal mandate deeming reasonable and permissible "a search by a full time teacher or school official, acting on any colorable suspicion based on professional experience and judgment, of any minor student, on the grounds of any public school, if the search is conducted to ensure that classrooms, school buildings, and school property remain free of all weapons, dangerous materials, or illegal narcotics." Adding insult to injury, the bill would deny certain federal funds (issued under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965) to localities that fail to implement the federal search policy. States and local school districts -- with parental involvement -- are fully capable of setting school safety policies without having a one-size-fits-all mandate handed down from Washington, D.C. Moreover, H.R. 5295 -- which was brought to the floor of the House without committee hearings and passed by a voice vote, thus making it difficult for citizens to know how their representatives voted -- is designed to limit either discretion and common sense on the part of local authorities. "The way this bill is worded, it strongly implies that the school district's policy has to be one where they can conduct random mass searches," said Bill Piper, director of national affairs for the Washington, D.C.-based Drug Policy Alliance. "If the principal hears a rumor that someone is selling marijuana, he could search every student in the building. Our big concern is that school administrators will get the wrong idea about the limits of their constitutional powers." Federally coerced mass searches of adolescents do not teach kids how to be free citizens of a constitutional republic, but rather how to be good and obedient subjects of the state Perhaps there are at least some Colorado parents and elected officials willing to "just say no" to the federal government's latest tax dollar-backed intrusion into local governmental and family affairs, even if it means giving up some federal bribe money. --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman