Pubdate: Wed, 09 Aug 2006 Source: Intelligencer Journal (PA) Copyright: 2006 Lancaster Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.lancnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/211 Author: Elaine J. Jones, Intelligencer Journal Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) PENN MANOR HOLDS FINAL AIRING OF ITS NEW DRUG-TESTING POLICY LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - Penn Manor school board heard public comment, some of it critical, on its drug-screening policy Tuesday night. About 40 people attended the district's third and final reading of the new policy in Manor Middle School. The policy was enacted in July and will be in effect when the school year begins in a few weeks. "You are usurping our parental rights," one mother said. She said the district's job is to "educate our children and uphold the law of the land" and not to "trample our civil rights." She suggested all teachers, administrators and employees of the school district also should be subject to random testing. Under the policy, students at both middle schools and the high school will be entered into a pool to be selected for random, unannounced drug testing. Testing for middle school students will be voluntary, based on a signed request by a parent or the student. High school participation is mandatory for any student participating in extracurricular or cocurricular activities as well as any student requesting a parking permit. Superintendent Donald Stewart and Ellen Pollock, administrative assistant for curriculum, led a PowerPoint presentation highlighting key areas of the policy, which has changed only slightly since June. Stewart said over the years many parents have asked him, "Can you test my child?" But the law doesn't allow a school to do that. Under the policy, he said, Penn Manor will have a mechanism that "gives parents and kids a good, valid reason to stay away from drugs." Another district parent at Tuesday's meeting discussed case law in which one Pennsylvania school district was found to have violated Constitutional rights by using a drug-screening policy. In reply, Pollock and other members of the committee said they have reviewed that and other cases, and state courts have upheld similar programs in many districts if there is a clear need. Stewart said a committee was formed last spring to address drug use in the district. The committee consisted of parents, students, school board members, the athletic director, coaches, teachers, the school nurse and other school officials. Pollock said drug and alcohol violations have increased in the district, especially in the 2004-05 school year. The committee is aware of at least one student death from drug use, she said, and "if we can save one student, then we have more than done our job." The district has entered into a contract with Lancaster General Hospital, which Stewart said has "an outstanding reputation," to do the testing. Dr. Alan Hay, the medical review officer from the hospital, was at the meeting to answer specific questions about the methods of testing. The urine sample testing will seek a number of controlled substances, but not alcohol. Stewart said a negative test result would be known almost immediately, and a letter would be sent home to the parents notifying them their child had been tested and the test was negative. If there is a non-negative result, the sample would be sealed with evidence tape and immediately shipped to Quest Diagnostics for a confirmatory test, which Hay said is even more precise. In response to one parent who suggested kids who use drugs know how to beat the system, Hay said he has no experience with "false negatives." The tests are now so precise, Hay said, substances such as poppy seeds, Sudafed and ibuprofen will not cause a positive test. Nevertheless, the policy states a parent may request a third test, but the parents would have to pay $65. Depending on the number of students in the voluntary program, Stewart estimates 900 to 1,100 students will be in the pool. A confirmed positive test would result in a 40-day suspension from the student's activity or privilege, with an opportunity for reduction to 20 days for participating in the student assistance program. Parents would be notified, but there would be no police notification. Stewart said the drug-screening policy does not replace other drug and alcohol policies within the district, such as those prohibiting possession of illegal drugs. Under the policy, students at both middle schools and the high school will be entered into a pool to be selected for random, unannounced drug testing. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom