Pubdate: Tue, 17 Jan 2006
Source: Post, The (Ohio U, OH Edu)
Copyright: 2006 The Post
Contact: http://thepost.baker.ohiou.edu/letter.php
Website: http://thepost.baker.ohiou.edu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1269
Author: Lauren Lipaj
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)

DEBATED DRUG-TESTING POLICY IN LIMBO PENDING ADDITIONAL EXPLORATION

Alexander school board members voted unanimously  Thursday to rescind
a controversial drug-testing policy  until research can be completed
for a possible new  drug-prevention policy.

Superintendent Robert Bray recommended the school board  rescind the
policy and conduct a survey of taxpayers in  the district to see what
they thought would be the best  policy for drug prevention in
Alexander schools.

The board will seek the advice of Brian Quick,  professor of
communication studies at Ohio University,  during the February board
meeting to see what  information the board will need to make a good
decision  on a new policy.

During the board meeting Thursday, two new members,  Gordon Brooks and
Mike Chapman, were sworn into the  Alexander school board. Brooks and
Chapman won their  positions on the board during the November
elections,  unseating Synthia Clary and Steve Thomas, who both  voted
to implement the original drug-testing policy.

Many Alexander district parents came to the board  meeting last week
to share their ideas on how they  would like the "new" school board to
be run.

"I think that the election in November showed that  people wanted an
overwhelming change ... part of  establishing this change is
establishing the role of  the administration and not overstepping
those bounds,"  Alexander district parent Doug Keiter said. "One thing
 that I'd like to see changed is that I'd like to see  these board
meetings turn into a public participation  meeting. I'd like to be
able to raise my hand and speak  any time instead of just standing up
here and giving a  monologue."

Sally Jo Wiley, leader of the parents who threatened to  sue the
Alexander School Board for conducting a  committee meeting not open to
the public, which  resulted in the controversial drug policy, said she
 would like to see the board go back to a "question and  answer, give
and take" format. She said she would like  to improve the relationship
between the parents and the  administration.

"We weren't paying close enough attention, and the  board tried to
sneak (the drug-testing policy)  through," Wiley said. "We didn't know
anything about  (the policy) until we heard that (the board) was doing
 it."

The group of parents who threatened to sue the school  board is still
together, Wiley said. Its future role  will be to participate more in
school board meetings in  order to stay informed, so the board will
not be able  to conduct any meetings free from public scrutiny.

"It was a major change for the good with the two new  board members
being sworn in," Wiley said. "(The new  board members) were our
independent people who will be  our independent thinkers and won't be
as easily led as  the last board."

Board member Fred Davis and Wiley shared the same idea  about what
kind of drug-prevention policy would be best  for Alexander schools.
Both said a drug-prevention  education plan - rather than a
drug-testing plan - for  kindergarten through twelfth grade students
would be  best for curbing student drug use.

The Alexander school board suspended its drug-testing  policy for the
remainder of the year during the  November board meeting to avoid a
potential lawsuit  over the state's open-meetings law. A group of
district  parents thought the school board violated the  open-meetings
law when it created the drug-testing  policy during committee meetings
that were not open to  the public.

The policy was examined during the January meeting by  the new board
members to establish a position on the  policy for the remainder of
the school year.

Board member Dale Sinclair was not present for the vote  that
rescinded the policy.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin