Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2007
Source: New Jersey Herald (NJ)
Copyright: 2007, Quincy Newspapers, Inc
Contact:  http://www.njherald.com/news/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2162
Author: Stephen J. Novak
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

RANDOM DRUG TESTING PROGRAM ON HOLD

SPARTA -- The testing equipment was already purchased  in anticipation
of a September start, but students at  Sparta High School won't be
subject to random drug  tests until at least October, if at all.

A proposal before the New Jersey State Board of  Education could
require all schools with random drug  testing programs to use
state-licensed laboratories for  every test, which could significantly
increase the cost  of the program approved by the Sparta Board of
Education in June.

At a work session meeting last week, the local board  decided to hold
off on the program's implementation  until the state makes a decision
on the policies, which  is expected to come in October.

"We are putting it on hold for the time being," said  board member
Jonathan Rush, the chair of the board's  curriculum committee, during
Monday's regular meeting.  "We are going to wait (on the state's
decision) and see  what happens. We'll make a decision on it then."

If the state board approves the policy measure, it  could put the
kibosh on Sparta's program, the first  ever approved by a public
school district in Sussex  County.

But, should the proposal be rejected, as federal drug  control
officials are requesting, Sparta school  officials say they are ready
to implement the drug  tests.

"We're ready to go with it," Superintendent Thomas  Morton said before
Monday's meeting. The testing  equipment, which mostly consists of
plastic cups for  urine tests, was purchased shortly after the board's
  approval of the program more than two months ago.  Though he could
not provide a specific figure, Morton  said the supplies were not costly.

"The most expensive thing is getting the tests done,"  he
said.

Morton estimated that the cost of the program, as it  currently
stands, is about $8 per test. The state board  of education's policy
proposal could increase that cost  to more than $30 per test.

When the program was first proposed to the district,  then-Principal
Richard Lio estimated the annual cost of  the program would run
between $4,750 and $5,250, with  most of that money dedicated to the
tests and  paperwork. Those costs could increase by four or five
times, Morton said.

But there is concern on both state and federal levels  that the
increased costs could discourage school  districts from adopting
similar programs. Random drug  testing programs have received the
support of the Bush  administration and other local and national
organizations, some of which are criticizing the state  board's
current proposal, said New Jersey School Boards  Association spokesman
Michael Yaple.

There are at least 21 school districts in the state  that have adopted
random drug testing policies,  including Sparta, according to
association records. The  number may vary since there is no one place
for schools  to report to, but it has been increasing.

"The number has grown slightly in recent years, but  it's still a
small percentage of schools in New  Jersey," Yaple said. He also said
the association is  concerned that the proposal would create a more
difficult and more expensive testing process.

The association itself supports random drug testing and  the 2005
legislation that asked the state board of  education to regulate the
program. It is also now  requesting the state Department of Education
to  "address the issue of additional mandated costs,"  according to
the July edition of the association's  on-line newsletter.

At a meeting of the state board last month, Dr. Bertha  K. Madras,
deputy director of the Office of Demand  Reduction in the Office of
National Drug Control  Policy, chastised the proposal for being
"one-size-fits-all."

"The federal program is flexible," Madras said in her  testimony.
"With over 500 schools in the federal  program, we have observed that
keeping the program  flexible, allowing schools and parents to choose
the  mode that is most suitable to local needs and adherence  to core
requirements, can ensure program  effectiveness."

Sparta's approved program is based off of those of area  districts
with similar policies. High school students  involved with sports,
extracurricular activities, who  drive to school or who otherwise
volunteer would have  to enter into a testing pool, from which several
  students would be randomly selected by assigned numbers  each week.
The program would be strictly voluntary in  the middle school.

Those students would then provide urine samples tested  by the school
nurse. A positive result would then be  sent to an outside laboratory
for verification. The  state board's proposal would have every test
sent to a  lab.

Madras said that "a large majority of students test  negative," which
serves as "evidence that testing  serves primarily as a deterrent."
The goals of the  program are prevention of drug use, by providing
students "a reason to resist peer pressure," and  provide early
intervention for students who have  started using illegal substances.

Though such policies have been criticized by groups  such as the ACLU
and lawsuits from individual or groups  of students, the U.S. and
state Supreme Courts have  upheld the programs as constitutional. To
obtain  federal grants for the testing programs, districts must
demonstrate the support of parents and teachers. Also,  Madras said,
results of the test are not disclosed,  even to law enforcement, and
results are destroyed when  the student graduates.

Sparta school officials have not seen the opposition to  the program
many of them expected after its approval.  None of the public's
comments Monday night pertained to  the policy.
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MAP posted-by: Derek