Pubdate: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 Source: Star Press, The (IN) Copyright: 2007 The Star Press Contact: http://www.thestarpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1925 Author: Oseye T. Boyd Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DRUG TESTING GIVES KIDS HELP SAYING 'NO' Students Say Random Drug Tests Can Seem Like Punishment, But School Officials Say The Practice Helps MUNCIE -- Kylie Dorton doesn't like the idea of schools testing students for drugs. Dorton, a senior at Delta High School, has never been tested, but because she is a student driver and an athlete she is in the pool of students who could be randomly tested. "I just don't think high school students should have to be put through this at all," Dorton said. While Dorton hasn't been tested, fellow senior Autumn Davis has. And it wasn't a pleasant experience, she recalled. The principal or school security guard goes to classrooms, tells students to grab all their belongings and takes students to the nurse's office, where they must wait until the test is finished. The test involves collecting a urine specimen from each student, and the length of time of the test depends on how long it takes collect the specimen; some students finish rather quickly while it takes hours to collect a sample from others, the students say. "It's kind of scary," Davis said. "I felt pressure: invasion of privacy. The (toilet) water was all blue. They weren't really nice. They assume you had (used drugs). They don't let you shut the door. It's like a punishment." "I always heard it was really scary," senior Katelyn Eskew added. Tyler Hernly, also a senior, has never been tested. He thinks it's a good idea to do so, but the procedure could be tweaked a little, he said. "You're, like, guilty until proven innocent in the way it's conducted,' Hernly said. Several local districts have used random drug testing, some adding the practice more recently than others. Randolph Eastern Schools just started a voluntary random drug test for students in extracurricular activities and student drivers, Supt. Cathy Stephen said. Union Junior-Senior High School held a parent meeting on Wednesday to discuss the possibility of implementing a policy. Mount Pleasant Township Community Schools also randomly tests students. Muncie Community Schools and Wes-Del Community Schools, on the other hand, don't use random drug testing. The Muncie School Board has discussed implementing a policy, but has not done so as the incidence of students caught with drugs is low, Supt. Marlin Creasy said. Court rulings Delta implemented a random drug testing policy in the mid-90s, but that policy was suspended in 2000 pending litigation on drug testing in the Indiana courts. In 2002, the Penn-Harris-Madison School Corp. vs. Joy, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled it wasn't unconstitutional for schools to perform random, suspicionless drug tests on students involved in extracurricular activities or student drivers. That same year, in Linke vs. Northwestern School Corp., the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that drug tests didn't "violate the searches and seizures clause of the state constitution or the privileges and immunities clause," after parents challenged the school's random drug testing policy, according to the American Civil Liberties Union Web site. After those rulings, random drug tests of student athletes, drivers, those in extracurricular activities and students whose parents opt to have them tested began again Delta in spring 2002. "It is a healthful thing," Delta Principal Greg Hinshaw said. "It is a necessary thing. It doesn't catch everything. It certainly does catch some things. We have more than 800 of our 900 or so students in the pool. Obviously, there are some students out there who make an effort to make sure they're not in the pool, and the Supreme Court protects their right to do that." 'Help saying no' Daleville Community Schools has tested students for drugs for about 15 years. Daleville followed Shenandoah Schools, after the Henry County school district became one of the first local districts to implement such a policy. Daleville also stopped for a short time awaiting the outcome of the Northwestern court case. Only student athletes and those whose sign up them up are tested, but there has been discussion of including students who drive or are involved in any extracurricular activity. No formal recommendation has been made before the board, Daleville Junior-Senior High School Principal John Junco said. The drug testing policy often gives student athletes an easy out to peer pressure about drugs, Junco and Supt. Paul Garrison said. "We had some community discussion, the board members at board meetings and with students, and we had a group of athletes at that time who wanted a little help saying no," Garrison said. "One of the things that we think is good about such a policy is it allows people to say, 'No, I can't do that. I'm going to be tested.'" The Delta students agreed the possibility of a test is a deterrent for some students. "I think it prevents students from doing it because there's a chance of maybe getting tested," Dorton said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek