Pubdate: Sun, 09 Apr 2006 Source: Monterey County Herald (CA) Copyright: 2006 Monterey County Herald Contact: http://www.montereyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/273 Author: Clarissa Aljentera, Herald Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) TRUSTEES LOOK AT DRUG-TEST PROGRAM Student's Anonymity A Sticking Point After taking a look at a policy for random voluntary drug testing of students, Carmel Unified School District trustees are solidifying guidelines that will be presented for adoption at a meeting Monday night. The thrust of the guidelines will be to ensure that there is no paper trail for students who test positive for drugs. Trustees were concerned about a worst-case scenario in which student records could be subpoenaed after test results were sent to parents. The drug-testing program was approved in January and will be implemented next school year. It will be offered to Carmel High students and eighth-graders at Carmel Middle School. Parents and students are required to sign a form to participate. Trustees postponed a vote last month on the guidelines in order to clarify questions about how to implement board policy. Among their concerns was that students' names could be tied to test results and kept by the drug-analysis company. Under the contract to be approved Monday, only the company collecting the data will have results in a form that can be linked to individual students. That data will be destroyed after 30 days. Board President Howard Given said parents were concerned that students might be penalized down the line if their records were subpoenaed. Trustees didn't think this was fair, he said, because the program wasn't meant to punish students. "The whole idea of the thing is that there is no penalty," Given said. After students are tested at school, their samples will be sent to a laboratory and tested for drugs such as speed, cocaine, marijuana, heroin and methamphetamine. Numbers will be assigned to students so their names won't appear on the samples. Trustees also wanted the company to test for alcohol. Originally a rapid screen was going to be performed at school and tested again at the laboratory. But because trustees want to ensure accuracy, they want samples tested at the laboratory. Under the new proposal, parents would receive an initial phone call instead of a letter from the data-collection agency to let them know the result. School administrators won't have access to the records or test results. Administrators and trustees hope the program will start an open dialog for families, as well as give students a tool to help them refuse drugs or alcohol. The school district is expecting to spend $8,000 to $10,000 for the initial year. Each test costs about $40 per student. If you go What:Carmel Unified School District meeting When:5 p.m. Monday Where:Carmel Middle School library CARMEL UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman