Pubdate: Tue, 28 Mar 2006 Source: Stony Plain Reporter, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 The Stony Plain Reporter Contact: http://www.stonyplainreporter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3370 Author: Trevor Miller Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) SCHOOL BOARD STAND FIRMLY BEHIND DRUG DOG PROGRAM No drugs in Parkland School Division schools, PSD's board of education said, and this time the trustees put money behind that statement. The issue of drugs came forward for a second time before the board, this time during an unscheduled portion of business arising from the minutes at the beginning of a meeting March 21. Trustee Marie Anstey asked the board to approve contributing one-fifth of the cost of the passive drug dog team, conditional upon the other four partners contributing their portions. "Drugs are not an issue in Parkland School Division schools, they're a problem in this province and they're an issue in this community," Anstey said. "I really believe that if all five partners could get together and join arms collectively, that we could really make a difference for the youth in our community." Const. Craig Albers with the Spruce Grove/Stony Plain RCMP detachment explained, when the issue came forward the first time, that visits to schools by a drug sniffing dog would be intended as "sort of a deterrent". The idea is to "give the kids kind of a heads-up. We want to make sure that the school is a safe environment." The way the idea would work is that a community policing officer with a passive drug dog would show up in the hallways of schools from time to time, both to detect any illegal substances and to increase RCMP visibility. According to Albers, the plan is to run this system similar to the St. Albert detachment, which has a community policing officer, with a drug dog, visit schools in the city on a regular basis. However, Albers said, the visits are "done without warning, with no set schedules." The officer and dog could also visit a school at the request of its principal, in cases in which there is suspicion of illegal activity. During the earlier meeting, the concept was simply presented for consideration. At this week's PSD board meeting, though, other members echoed Anstey's comments about contributing financially and voted unanimously to write a letter to RCMP Insp. Wade Blake stating that intent. Copies of the letter will be sent to the other partners and the local MLAs. According to information provided by the RCMP, the total cost of setting up a passive drug detection dog unit is expected to be approximately $29,000, with a cost-per-year after the initial set up of $2,700. The other partners considered in this venture are the Evergreen Catholic Regional School Division, the Town of Stony Plain, Parkland County and the City of Spruce Grove. According to board chair Caren Mueller, ECSRD's board of trustees is also in favour of the drug dog team, though due to the timing of the request the board was unable to commit to any funding at its March 13 meeting. Mueller expects the issue to come forward again in the near future. The City of Spruce Grove council had also planned to discuss the issue during its March 13 regular meeting, but the item was removed from the agenda at the beginning of the meeting. "Administration has some more work to do on this," said city manager Doug Lagore, who added the intent was for the issue to come forward to council at a later date. The passive drug dog investigation first came before the board Feb. 21, when a letter from Blake asked for support of the project. At that time, the board wrote a letter supporting the initiative in principle. The project is expected to be similar to one taking place in St. Albert, where the dog does not replicate the duties of the two police service dogs in the provincial capital district. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom