Pubdate: Wed, 23 Aug 2006 Source: Peoria Journal Star (IL) Copyright: 2006sPeoria Journal Star Contact: http://pjstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/338 Note: Does not publish letters from outside our circulation area. Author: Gary L. Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) MIDLAND OKS RANDOM DRUG TESTING High School Students, Parents Must Agree To Monitoring LACON - The Midland School District in Marshall County has joined the increasing number of area districts to implement random drug testing for high school students competing in athletics and some other activities. The School Board voted 7-0 on Monday night to adopt the policy. Students and their parents will have to agree to random testing by urine samples anytime during the year for the students to participate in sports, cheerleading or scholastic bowl competitions. The program "is designed to create a safe, drug-free environment for student athletes and to assist them in getting help when needed," according to a mission statement that introduces the six-page policy. The protocol is modeled closely on a policy enacted for the Bushnell-Prairie City High School. Urine samples will be required from at least 5 percent of the total pool of covered participants at Midland on at least eight occasions during the school year. Students will be selected by number in a computer-based process. Collection and testing will be done by employees of Perry Memorial Hospital in Princeton to keep district personnel out of the process, said high school Principal Rolf Sivertsen. "I put myself in that pool. I thought that was important" as an example, Sivertsen said after Monday's meeting. Each sample will initially cost $12 to test, and any inconclusive result will be sent to a separate lab at a cost of $37.50. Sivertsen did not have an estimate of the overall cost but said he believed it would be covered by state grant funds. Confirmed violations would bar students from competition for periods ranging from one-third of a season to their remaining high school career. Some penalties could be reduced by voluntary counseling programs at the students' expense. Midland acted shortly after a testing policy was passed in the neighboring Fieldcrest School District, where administrators said it had been prompted by alcohol and marijuana use. A few incidents involving students last year also influenced Midland, but Sivertsen said another factor was the "influx of heroin" into the state along Interstate 80 to the north. The parents' committee that helped formulate the policy "felt that was close enough to our county that we needed to do something to protect our students," Sivertsen said. That protective interest was one of the points criticized Monday by the only person who objected publicly. Area businessman and parent Terry Giosta, a frequent critic of Midland policies and practices, said the policy reflected the growing tendency of school districts to try to be "every student's parent" instead of concentrating on education. Giosta also maintained the policy would have no real impact on the use of alcohol or other drugs. He presented information indicating random testing is opposed by many organizations, including the National Education Association and the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence. "It has done nothing to stop or slow drug use," Giosta said. "It has not made our roads, school, or anywhere else safe from drugs." Sivertsen said the parents' committee plans to meet again in January to evaluate the program. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman