Pubdate: Thu, 09 Mar 2006 Source: Daily Press (Newport News,VA) Copyright: 2006 The Daily Press Contact: http://www.dailypress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585 A FINE SOLUTION W-JCC's Voluntary Drug Tests Will Help Parents And Students The Williamsburg-James City County School Board crept up to the edge of a disaster and came out with a victory. Here's what the landscape at the edge of disaster looked like: A community that agreed on one thing, the need to reduce drug and alcohol use among its young people. A proposal to impose random drug testing on a large section of the high school student body, a proposal that was deeply flawed and certain to land the school district in legal hot water. A vocal, passionate and organized segment of the population pushing it to adopt that policy. And a community deeply, irretrievably divided over whether school-imposed testing is the right way to get at the problem of substance abuse. It was apparent, by the time the vote was taken, that the board, collectively, had arrived at a reckoning of the price for accommodating the group insisting on a heavy-handed approach. So it stepped back from the precipice and pulled off a coup. The board stripped the policy put before it by Superintendent Gary Mathews of its troublesome elements: the threats to constitutional protections, the coercive nature, the concerns about confidentiality, the timing, the usurpation of parental discretion and responsibility. And through the mechanism of an amendment crafted by Mary Ann Maimone and unanimously adopted, the board turned the policy into something positive: It is voluntary. Parents and children can choose to participate - or not. It begins early, when the problem does. Testing will be offered for grades six to 12. It safeguards confidentially. Only parents and the test administrator will be informed of test results. It puts the decision about what to do about a positive test where it belongs, with the parents, and assigns to schools the appropriate role of helping them find support. It's non-punitive and promotes the anti-drug tool of engagement in school. A positive test won't result in exclusion from school activities. Instead of applying the sledgehammer of a divisive policy, the new approach will hold out an incentive, a resource and support to parents - - something it was obvious that many parents are desperate for. By backing away from a proposal that would have imposed testing on all students who take part in competitive extracurricular activities or park at school, the board avoided one of the biggest dangers of the policy Mathews proposed: alienating a significant number of students and parents. Not just distressing them, but making them feel violated in an intensely personal way, causing students to pass up activities that would have been very good for them, and striking at individuals' deeply held sense of what it means to be an American and free. Doing so would have carried a great cost, which would have been paid by School Board members, by students and by the school community. Finding a way to avoid that is nothing less than a coup, one the board pulled off with grace and, when it counted, resolve that suits it well. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPF Florida)