Pubdate: Thu, 27 Dec 2007 Source: Courier News (Bridgewater, NJ) Copyright: 2007 Courier News Contact: http://www.c-n.com/c-n/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2163 Author: Pamela Sroka-Holzmann Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) HILLSBORO CAN VOICE OPINIONS ON DRUG TESTING Board to Disclose Policy on Random Student Drug Testing at Next Month's Meeting. HILLSBOROUGH -- The public can voice opinions on plans to implement random student drug testing at Hillsborough High School next month before the Board of Education makes a final decision about it. Scheduling conflicts had caused Board of Education members to move the public hearing from this month to the 7:30 p.m. work meeting on Jan. 3. School board member David Kanaby, chairman of the board's Policy Committee, said the board's attorney is drafting a policy for the random drug testing which, if approved, would be implemented in the 2008-09 school year. The meeting is expected to include an overview of the policy, results from a student drug survey, the cost to draft and implement the policy, as well as public and board input on the draft. To date, Policy Committee members are the only board members who have seen the draft. Other board members are expected to review the draft before Jan. 3. At least three board members have publicly disclosed their opposition to the plan and want to attend the meeting, including board member Frank Blandino, who also is the township's municipal prosecutor. The proposed policy would mirror the one used at Hunterdon Central Regional High School in Raritan Township: Hillsborough students participating in athletics, extracurricular activities, school clubs and those who drive to school would be subject to random testing. Hillsborough school officials began discussing random student drug testing last year after an online board study last year found that 70 percent of 800 study participants favored random drug testing. The Board of Education also has been awaiting new state regulations on the measure. In July, a hearing in Trenton among state Board of Education members, school principals and the Drug-Free Schools Coalition focused on proposed new rules by the state Board of Education that would require state-licensed clinical labs to collect and test urine samples for a variety of recreational drugs. The state lab tests, which could run up to $60 each, are quintuple the $12 swab tests administered by school nurses. Hillsborough Superintendent of Schools Edward Forsthoffer III said the new procedures will be incorporated into the draft policy for the Board of Education's review. The board must also decide how to fit the cost of the new regulations into the school budget. Kanaby said the district chose Hunterdon Central as a model because that district won a 2002 state Supreme Court case that challenged the school's random drug testing policy. The school, which enrolls about 3,100 students, with 2,700 in the testing pool, also has used urine screening as part of the program. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake