Pubdate: Sat, 11 Mar 2006 Source: Virginia Gazette, The (Williamsburg, VA) Copyright: 2006 The Virginia Gazette Contact: http://www.vagazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3760 Author: Mary Vause, The Viriginia Gazette THE PATH TO VOLUNTARY STUDENT DRUG TESTING WILLIAMSBURG -- Even after a policy vote that followed 13 months of discussion, the random student drug testing debate rages on. Tuesday's 11th-hour compromise that made drug testing completely voluntary and non-punitive drew cheers from the anti-drug testing movement, who considered it a win-win amendment. However, some supporters of mandatory testing wonder whether a culture of teen drug abuse can be dented by a policy that hinges on signed consent from parent and child. Some felt mousetrapped Tuesday night by the surprise turn of events, since there was no public debate about going voluntary. School Board chair Denise Koch said in an interview Friday that she had researched voluntary testing and was impressed with its potential for a larger testing pool of middle and high school students. She also likes the non-punitive angle as safeguarding confidentiality. Koch found that in most voluntary programs across the country, only parents receive drug test results, not school officials. If caught, students are not removed from extracurriculars, protecting them from the public infamy of being kicked out after a drug test. In some families, parents will expect their children to sign on. "Somebody was going to be pressuring [the students to take drug tests] either way," she said. "If it were a mandatory policy, it would be us. If it's voluntary, it will be the parents." Some voluntary drug testing programs in California, Pennsylvania and Alabama have achieved 50%-75% participation rates through marketing and incentive programs, according to proponents. Schools offer participating students discounts at local businesses and drug-free certificates that can be presented to potential employers. School Board vice chair Mary Ann Maimone, who proposed the switch to voluntary testing, considers preservation of parental responsibility the strongest argument for going voluntary. "A family e-mailed me and said, 'We sat down and talked with our kids today and decided they will participate in drug testing, and as parents we want to thank you for making sure that we have that conversation with them,'" she recalled. "That conversation is going to happen hopefully hundreds of times throughout our school division. That conversation would never have happened if the policy was mandatory. "We want to keep the parents empowered," Maimone continued. "All the research indicates that kids listen to parents first and other caring adults second. It's all about partnering with parents not coercing parents to help create kids who are responsible adults." Devotees of mandatory testing flinch at the thought of asking for consent signatures since some families will not step up to the task. "In my personal studies of voluntary student drug testing, I see one serious point of concern that continuously burns in my brain," said parent Beverly Lancaster. "The voluntary drug testing allows the neediest teenagers in our community to fall through the cracks. I think our students who receive feeble parental support will not be helped with [the new policy]. "I fear these very students, in their own young lives, will still pay the high cost of having too little family support combined with too many illicit drugs or alcohol." Dee McHenry, co-chair of the parental task force for mandatory drug testing, also weighed in. "Any school board motivated foremost by ensuring student safety would have approved blended testing of sixth-through twelfth-graders as part of a complete care package: mandatory drug testing as legally allowed, and voluntary for all others," she said. "This board's rash action on Tuesday night telegraphed that they put the idea of student privacy ahead of safety, thus appeasing vocal opponents to testing, among whom very few are likely to sign up their kids." Anti-mandatory parents cheered Maimone's compromise. Curt Gaul, an outspoken critic of mandatory testing, praised the new policy and said that he and his teen daughter will consider enrolling. "What I'd like to see now is those who put forth the initial plan, those who expressed concerns, and those who haven't yet participated, all working side-by-side," he said. "Even families that don't sign up, just the fact that it's become a public issue and will be discussed in schools every year will help increase dialogue." WJC parent Kathy Hornsby met briefly with Maimone last weekend to make a case for voluntary testing. "I knew that there should be no way with the division in this community that we should either completely drop the concept or completely go with the one that was presented," Hornsby said in an interview. She likes the non-punitive nature of voluntary, which will not kick students out of extracurriculars for a positive test. "Everybody agrees that between the last school bell ringing and when parents get home, that's when kids get pregnant, get high and get into trouble," Hornsby said. "It's an at-risk time, and keeping the kids engaged in something after school is a positive thing." At Tuesday's board meeting, approval of mandatory testing looked more probable because of technical revisions by School Board member Joe Fuentes. On Tuesday night, however, Fuentes immediately seconded Maimone's amendment to make the program voluntary. In an interview Thursday, he explained his change of heart. "There was a tremendous amount of pressure on us from both sides," he said. "The opposition included very high-level people from the city and county who were calling us, requesting that we table the issue. By the end of last week, I could tell there weren't enough yes votes, and that the board was going to go no. If the policy were tabled, drug testing would never get implemented." Fuentes said that he welcomed the amendment Tuesday night as a compromise that might be palatable to both sides. "I believe the solution we resolved is actually stronger," Fuentes added. "If the school does their work properly, and the community is truly behind it, then this policy has the potential to surpass any expectations one may have had for the policy that did not pass." Superintendent Gary Mathews will now edit the language of the policy to align with the amendment before its final approval by the board. Koch said she does not anticipate another public hearing since the policy has technically been approved with an amendment. The surprising ease with which Maimone's amendment passed provided a stark contrast to the hours of lengthy debate in the wake of Mathews' policy proposal. Even Fuentes' minor policy amendments at the Feb. 21 work session were pored over line by line. Why was there so little discussion? Fuentes suggested that the amendment may have passed easily in part because of exhaustion after 13 months of debate. "I'm just whipped on it, I'm really tired of listening to the extremes," he said. "There was nothing new that anyone could tell me that night. There was nothing new that I could learn from more debating. "Several [colleagues]," he added, "said they weren't leaving the room that night until we settled it." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPF Florida)