Pubdate: Sun, 18 Feb 2007 Source: Today's Sunbeam (NJ) Copyright: 2007 Today's Sunbeam Contact: http://www.nj.com/sunbeam/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4423 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DISTRICTS WEIGH DRUG TESTING It's no mystery high school students experiment with drugs and alcohol. But Salem County School Boards Association President John Smith says high schools can take a more active stance to deter students from experimenting by instituting random drug and alcohol tests for students involved in extra curricular activities. Smith hosted a program attended by representatives from each school district, detailing a new drug and alcohol testing policy that would randomly select students involved in extra curricular activities for testing. The computer generated program would randomly pick 10 to 20 percent of students involved in extra curricular activities a year for a urine analysis test. If a foreign substance is found in the completed test, the sample would be sent to a lab for further testing to find the illegal substance. "It's an educational tool. We are the surrogate parents in the world of education," he said. "We have to be responsible for the growth of our students while they're in our educational system." The tests, he said, would be mainly for educational purposes and would serve as a tool to alert parents of their children's activities. "This program would not be a punishment program. We're not violating any student's rights," he said. "There could be counseling and mentor programs established if we find we have a problem in the school district's. We need to stress the importance of being drug free to our students. It's a way to ensure that we nip this problem in the bud before it becomes an issue." Currently, school districts in Salem County only have one drug test for their students mandated by the State of New Jersey. If a school athletic team reaches the state championship in any sport, the team must submit to a urine analysis to test for steroid abuse. This, Smith said, is not enough to deter students from succumbing to the temptations of drugs or alcohol. "If this program is brought into the districts, students would be conscious that they might be selected for a test and that would be a major deterrent," he said. "The students would have to respect the tests." Test kits would cost about $8 a piece for the schools, and about $40 a piece if the kit had to be sent to a lab for testing. Smith said school districts would only have to test about 100 students in an entire year. "It's not a cost issue at all, though many people tend to think it is," Smith said. The Penns Grove-Carneys Point Regional School District, he said, showed the most interest in the program and was looking more carefully at installing it in the school district. Penns Grove Superintendent Dr. Joseph Massare could not be reached for comment on Friday. The program doesn't seem to hold much interest for districts that don't serve high school students. Lower Alloway Creek District Chief School Administrator Fred Pratta said a program like this isn't attractive for his district because it only serves students from kindergarten through eighth grade. "Of course, if we ever suspected one of our students for drug use they would be tested immediately," he said. "But currently we don't feel we have a need for an extensive program." The Woodstown-Pilesgrove School District, which serves all grades, expressed interest in the program. Superintendent Robert Bumpus said the board of education would continue to look at testing options, and if a decision was made in favor of the testing program it would be initiated in the 2008-2009 school year. "We need time to look at the options and see if this is a viable program for our district," he said. "For some districts it works out, for other it doesn't. We need to look at research, surveys, and data so see if this program really does work." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek