Pubdate: Sun, 23 Sep 2007 Source: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL) Copyright: 2007 The Daily Herald Company Contact: http://www.dailyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/107 Author: Kerry Lester, Daily Herald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) IS ST. VIATOR PASSING THE DRUG TEST? With More Than Half of School Tested, Even President Admits It's Not Perfect Four months after announcing its controversial decision to drug test every student with a sample of hair, reality has hit at St. Viator High School. And for some students, reality bites. "I had to have part of my leg shaved," said senior Rob Smith. Smith, who sports a close cropped hairstyle, didn't have long enough hair on his head to clip for drug testing. A sample, which must be several centimeters long and approximately the diameter of a shoelace, is taken from each student's body and sent to Psychemedics Corp. laboratories in California, where it is evaluated for traces of marijuana, cocaine, opiates, amphetamines, PCP and ecstasy. Buzz cut or long flowing locks, everyone is getting tested. "There have even been guys who have lost some armpit hair," said freshman Cory Kay. More than half of the Arlington Heights school's 1,000 students have been tested since Aug. 27, according to the Rev. Mick Egan, president of St. Viator. Those who refuse the test face the possibility of expulsion. "So far, two students have tested positive for drug use," Egan said. He declined to release the individuals' names, or the details of their results. If a student tests positive, Egan meets with the student individually and calls their parents. "We talk, and give them a sheet of resources of 10 treatment and counseling centers in the Northwest suburban area," he said. Viator does not pay for counseling or rehab, or a second drug test. Students who test positive are required to pay $45 to test again in 90 days. "If they test positive again, they face the possibility of expulsion," he said. By testing 50 to 60 students each day, the school is on par to have completed testing of the entire student body by its mid-October benchmark. It's also the school's Homecoming weekend. Though 20 students will be tested at random each week for the rest of the year, some members of the community are concerned that student drug use will rise after months of model behavior. "We gave them fair warning (about the upcoming test) last spring," guidance counselor Joe Majkowski said. "We believe there are a number of students who curtailed their drug use over summer vacation." Lauren Banaszak, a senior, thinks once the program's random testing phase begins, some might take their chances with the roulette wheel. "There were definitely some kids who didn't (do drugs) this summer because they knew it would show up on their test. I do think though, there are going to be some kids who will go back to using and take their chances with the random testing," she said. Or find a different way to get high. Viator's hair test does not detect inhalants, prescription drug abuse, steroids or alcohol, all of which, according to national and local teen drug experts, are on the rise. One in 10 high school seniors have taken Vicodin, according to a 2006 National Institute on Drug Abuse survey. Also last year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a survey that found 36.3 percent of ninth grade boys reported drinking in the past month, as did 36.2 percent of girls. Tom Nall, who teaches freshman and senior history classes, took an informal survey of his students about the effects of the testing program on the student body. "I asked them if (this kind of test) would just make kids more resourceful about what substance they could get away with using," Nall said. "The general consensus was yes, it would." Like his students, Nall has had some reservations about the testing. The $75,000 budgeted for the 2007-08 school year is "a lot of money," Nall said. "I wonder if this is an easy way out. Could we have invested that in a worthwhile (substance abuse) education program instead?" "We're attempting to scare these kids. They have a good reason for saying 'No' while they're at Viator -- they won't want to get caught by the administration. But when they're out on their own at the age of 18 -- maybe it'll work against them. They'll have spent years saying 'No' for the wrong reasons." Egan admits that the program has its holes. "We're not denying that other drug abuse is out there," the priest said. "But we're trying our best to be proactive with the resources that are available to us." After all, suggests Majkowski, "We can't be taking urine samples every day to find out if they've been drinking." The school plans to make the program a permanent part of its academic life. "We're officially going to evaluate that at the end of the school year," Egan said. "But so far, we've had a tremendous amount of parental support." After some initial balking, many Viator students have seemingly accepted the drug testing with minimal grumbling. "This is a pretty controlling place," Kay said as Banaszak expressed agreement, and they noted dress code restrictions and behavioral standards, including having to take a Breathalyzer test for alcohol at school dances. "The (drug tests) are along the same lines," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake