Pubdate: Mon, 10 Jul 2006 Source: Telegraph (NH) Copyright: 2006 Telegraph Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/885 Author: Ashley Smith, Telegraph Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) PARENT PUSHES DISTRICT TO ALLOW DRUG DOG TO SEARCH HUDSON SCHOOL When Joann Auclair found a stash of pot in her teenage son's bedroom, she immediately wanted to know where it came from. She didn't expect her son to say that drugs are always available for sale at Alvirne High School. Marijuana and illegal prescriptions are especially easy to get, Auclair said the teenager confessed. Alarmed by the news, Auclair said she sat down with a guidance counselor to find out if the Hudson police drug dog could be used to search the school. The counselor told her the idea had been discussed, but administrators and the school board wouldn't have it, she said. School district officials say they don't recall having such conversations. Now Auclair has made it her mission to tell other parents that kids have easy access to drugs at Alvirne, and gather enough support to convince the school district to allow the drug dog to search Alvirne in the fall, she said. Her goal is weeding out the dealers. "If I have to start a petition, I will. I'll go door generation that's coming out of there. Are they all going to be drug addicts?" If a canine officer has ever stepped foot inside Alvirne High School, no one seems to know about it. Assistant Superintendent Mary Ellen Ormond said Thursday that she doesn't know whether the drug dog is used to search the school, and suggested contacting Principal Bryan Lane. Lane was out of the office Friday and could not be reached for comment. Reached Friday, police Lt. Robert Tousignant said he couldn't think of a time when the drug dog was used at Alvirne. Tousignant has been with the department more than 25 years. He referred further questions to Capt. Don Breault, who did not return a phone call. The officer who handles the drug dog could not be reached for comment. According to school board President David Alukonis, the issue has never come up at a school board meeting. In fact, Alukonis said he would support a drug dog being used to search Alvirne. "That's something I'd personally like to see happen," Alukonis said. "If that was the request from the police department, I would certainly entertain that request." It's unclear whether police have an interest in the idea. Ormond also said the issue has never surfaced. If it were to come up, she would have to weigh the pros and cons and talk to parents before deciding to support it, Ormond said. As with any issue, it's likely that some parents would favor the idea and others would not, she said. According to school arrest records provided by Hudson police, only 14 drug arrests have been made at Alvirne in the last five years. The data reflect arrests made on school grounds from 2000 through 2005. Auclair thinks that's because the drug dog hasn't been allowed inside the building. She wants the school to take a tough stance on fighting drugs and will do anything she can to help combat the problem, she said, adding that Hudson's dog is sometimes used in other local high schools. "These towns are willing to let that drug dog in," she said. "Our own school won't let it through the door." Salem Deputy Police Chief Robert Larsen thinks his department has used Hudson's dog when large searches have been conducted at the high school. Salem has two of its own canine officers, but drug dogs are only effective for a certain period of time – sometimes police will request dogs from other departments when searching the whole building, he said. "It's kind of a mutual aid thing," Larsen said. Auclair's biggest concern is that drug use is curbed while the kids are still young. The school district isn't using all its resources to make sure that happens, she said. "They're going to let the kids go through the juvenile system and become drug addicts rather than stopping it at the schools," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek