Pubdate: Fri, 02 Feb 2007 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2007 The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tbo.com/news/opinion/submissionform.htm Website: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Author: Josh Poltilove Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) CATHOLIC SCHOOL TO RANDOMLY TEST FOR DRUGS TAMPA - Tampa Catholic High School will enact random drug testing this fall, becoming one of the few area schools to do so for all students. A quarter of the private school's 730 students will be screened annually for eight drugs. The first positive result will bring counseling and follow-up testing; the second brings expulsion. "Students are very susceptible to peer pressure, and we know that drugs have become increasingly prevalent," Principal Patricia Landry said Thursday. "We feel this will provide students a positive incentive to consider saying no." Public schools in Hillsborough and Pasco counties do not conduct drug tests, although Polk County public schools have tested student-athletes. Landry is aware of one other local, private high school with random testing - Clearwater Central Catholic High School, which began its program in 2002. She said no incident spurred Tampa Catholic's decision to begin testing, which it first considered five years ago. "We do not have a bad problem," she said. Parents will be required to sign a testing consent form. Cindy Aguila, whose son Michael is a Tampa Catholic sophomore, said the program will help parents protect their children. "Maybe some parents will say that it interferes with their children's rights, but I want my kids to grow up to be good human beings and good men," said Aguila, whose son Nicolas will be a Tampa Catholic freshman in the fall. In 1995, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that public schools could conduct random drug testing of athletes, expanding that in 2002 to include students involved in extracurricular activities. In New Jersey, at least two high schools have implemented random urine tests for alcohol. In Florida, a Miami lawmaker has again introduced legislation to allow random steroid testing of student-athletes in public and private high schools. There has been no push to test Hillsborough's public school students, district spokesman Steve Hegarty said. "We are considering something right now that would bring canine units into schools to check lockers," he said. "They wouldn't come into contact with students, but they would go through parking lots, where they would be able to pick up the scents of drugs in somebody's trunk." Tampa Catholic High, 4630 N. Rome Ave., is part of the Catholic Diocese of St. Petersburg, which leaves drug testing decisions to individual schools, said Vicki Wells Bedard, diocesan spokeswoman. Tampa Catholic administrators met with their counterparts at Clearwater Central, which randomly tests 10 percent of its 620 students each year for alcohol, ecstasy, marijuana, cocaine and other drugs. Landry wasn't sure which drugs would be screened at Tampa Catholic. At Clearwater Central, "few, if any" students test positive, Principal Dulce Roman said. "It's so very confidential, very random," said John Venturella, the school's president. "By and large, it is not punitive. ... We're trying to help kids." Not everyone considers the testing worthwhile. Tom Angell, campaigns director for Washington-based Students For Sensible Drug Policy, said money spent on testing should be used for drug education or to increase teacher pay. "Random drug testing treats students like they are guilty until they are proven innocent," Angell said. "We also think that it can make existing school drug problems worse than they actually are by breaking valuable [levels] of trust that exist between students and school officials." But Tampa Catholic football coach Bob Henriquez, a former state lawmaker, supports his school's decision. "Bottom line is, we're a Catholic school based on certain tenets for faith and behavior," he said. "And if this helps to identify some students that may have issues that we can help, I don't have a problem with it." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake