Pubdate: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 Source: Daily Times, The (MD) Copyright: 2007 The Daily Times Contact: http://www.delmarvanow.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.thedailytimesonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/116 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) FOR STUDENTS, SOME RIGHTS ARE CHECKED AT THE DOOR Four students were arrested at Sussex Central High School this week after police officers, with the school's cooperation, put the school day on pause to sweep the campus for illegal drugs. They found some, police said -- thus the charges, and long suspensions. It's not what parents think they're sending their children off to in the morning, a drug-raid shakedown. "My kids are starting to feel that they are in a jail," one parent wrote on the Delaware Wave's Web site, delawarewave.com, which reported the raid as it happened Friday morning. "I feel there are good intentions in the actions of the administration but they need to pick their battles." Perhaps they are, because unannounced drug raids are only the beginning of what administrators are legally permitted to do in the name of uncovering students' misdeeds. There are some limits to the times and places police and administrators can inspect students, their belongings and their speech, but this lockdown was on the correct side of those limits. If parents feel strongly enough about it, they should lobby elected officials to turn the tide. Could Indian River have told students to submit urine samples for drug tests? Yes, the Supreme Court said in 1995, if the testing was linked to volunteering for an activity like sports or a chess club. About 5 percent of schools around the country do so. If students had published articles in the student newspaper, could administrators have censored the paper or halted its publication? Yes, indeed. A 1987 Supreme Court decision about newspaper censorship in St. Louis held that school papers were educational tools, not true avenues of speech, and that they could be controlled by educators. In 2006, the Supreme Court declined to overturn a ruling that applied the same principle to college newspapers, too. The legal history of privacy rights of high schoolers is not one that should encourage high school students to store their stash in their lockers. Neither, regrettably, should they expect to exercise their free-speech rights in student newspapers. Students' privacy rights are worth something, but decades of lawmaking and court rulings have shaved that worth down to a nub. Building it back up, if that's what students and their parents want, will take hard work. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake