Pubdate: Thu, 13 Apr 2006 Source: Palladium-Item (IN) Copyright: 2006 Palladium-Item Contact: http://www.pal-item.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.pal-item.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2624 Author: Natalie Root, Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) RANDOM DRUG TESTS APPROVED Students Who Drive, Join Extracurricular Activity Could Be Picked HAGERSTOWN, Ind. -- Hagerstown Junior-Senior High School next year will begin randomly drug testing student drivers and students involved in extracurricular activities. Nettle Creek school board members approved a random drug screening policy at their regular meeting Wednesday. A committee of staff, parents and other community members began working on the policy in 2004. According to the policy, the purpose of the program is "to educate, assist and direct students away from drug and alcohol use and toward healthy and drug-free school participation." To be eligible to drive to school or participate in extracurricular activities, activities for which students don't receive grades, students must consent to being put in a pool from which names will be drawn randomly for saliva tests. The saliva specimens collected at school will be sent to a testing laboratory. Students who test positive for drugs will meet with the principal or other staff, along with the parents of the student, and will receive information on counseling and assistance agencies that the family can contact. Also, the student will be prevented from participating in extracurricular activities until a follow-up test taken 30 days later, shows a negative result, the policy says. Although the entire board voted to approve the policy, board member Dan Davis Jr. expressed a concern he has voiced in the past that the consequence for failing a random drug test is different than the consequence for drug use outlined in the athletic policy. He said that athletes caught using drugs or alcohol for a third time are suspended from sports for the rest of their school careers, but students could test positive three times on a random drug test without the same consequence. "What I don't want to see happening is two kids violate the same policy and one be exempt from the athletic policy because they were found to have violated it in a random drug screen," Davis said. Board president Paul Weiss said that since the random drug screening isn't supposed to be a punitive program, the results of a random test couldn't be referred to the athletic department for a punishment under the athletic policy. Board members agreed informally that the drug screening policy and athletic policy needed to be examined separately by the board. The committee used the Rush County School Corporation's random drug testing policy as a model to develop Nettle Creek's policy because it has been upheld in litigation. Western Wayne Schools already has a drug testing policy. [REMAINDER OF ARTICLE SNIPPED] [SIDEBAR] The policy According to the new Nettle Creek Schools policy, students who drive to school and students participating in any extracurricular activity, such as dances, athletics, or clubs, would be put into a pool. From that pool names would be drawn randomly for oral testing. Also, any other student or their parent could request that they be included in the pool. Students who test positive would be suspended from their extracurricular activity for 30 days, at which time they would be tested again before they could resume the activity. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl