Pubdate: Tue, 22 May 2007 Source: Journal Gazette, The (IN) Copyright: 2007 The Journal Gazette Contact: http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/908 Author: Angela Mapes, The Journal Gazette Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) GARRETT SCHOOLS TO BEGIN RANDOM DRUG TESTING GARRETT -- Garrett-Keyser-Butler schools will start random drug, alcohol and tobacco tests of students next year, the school board decided Monday. The board voted unanimously to approve the one-year pilot program for grades seven to 12, as long as financing can be secured. The program, estimated to cost $5,000, will be reviewed next spring and will be financed by grants or donations. If money is not available in time to implement the program next fall, it will begin in the first athletic season after money comes through, Superintendent Alan Middleton said. The testing will involve students who participate in athletics or other extracurricular activities, such as band or choir -- about 85 percent of the student body, Middleton said -- as well as students who drive to school. Guardians of students younger than 18 who don't fall under those categories may request their students be included in the testing pool, and students 18 or older may volunteer to be included, according to the policy. That mirrors Southwest Allen County Schools' random drug testing program took effect in the 2005-06 school year. Other schools, such as West Noble High School, test only athletes. Garrett will test two or three middle school students per week and five to 10 high school students selected by a computerized random selection, on random days of the week. If a student tests positive, his or her parents or guardians will be contacted for a meeting and referral to counseling services. Students may appeal if they have a valid prescription for a substance for which they've tested positive, the policy said. First-time offenders will have a 45-day social and extracurricular suspension, including practices and rehearsals, as well as a 45-day driving suspension. However, those suspensions might be reduced to 10 days if the student participates in a drug education and counseling program, according to the new policy. A second offense would result in a 90-day suspension of social and extracurricular participation and driving privileges, while a third would result in permanent suspension. Also Monday, the board announced that Bandit, a Labrador retriever K9 unit, will patrol Garrett-Keyser-Butler and DeKalb Eastern schools next fall. A school resource officer already splits his time between those districts. DeKalb Central schools has its own resource officer and will have its own dog. Cost to the district would be no more than a few hundred dollars, if that, for initial veterinarian bills and about $300 per year for dog food, Middleton said. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath