Pubdate: Mon, 09 Jul 2007 Source: Charleston Daily Mail (WV) Copyright: 2007 Charleston Daily Mail Contact: http://www.dailymail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/76 Author: Jessica M. Karmasek STATES SLOW TO CONSIDER DRUG TESTING TEACHERS Many states are discussing drug testing of teachers, but few are actually going ahead with it. The Kanawha County school system rejected a proposed policy last spring, but another teacher drug arrest caused the issue to be resurrected. Only Hawaii is further along with a teacher drug-testing program, according to information provided by the National School Boards Association. There, random drug testing for employees is a provision in a proposed new labor contract for teachers. The contract also would include a hefty pay raise for teachers. Hawaii's Department of Education and its teacher unions initially talked of a program under which teachers would be tested only when there was suspicion of drug use. Then Hawaii Gov. Linda Lingle intervened, urging the required random drug testing and calling it "non-negotiable." The testing is expected to start next year, said Greg Knudsen, spokesman for the Hawaii Department of Education. Knudsen said officials still must decide if everyone, including administrators, will be tested. Hawaii, which has just a single, statewide school district, has about 13,500 teachers and 50,000 employees total. Officials said they haven't yet determined how much the testing will cost. Later this month, the Kanawha school board is expected to discuss and possibly vote on a revised drug-testing policy. The county already has a drug-testing program for school bus drivers. At a meeting in April, board members voted down an expanded program. Pete Thaw and fellow board member Bill Raglin voted for it, while members Becky Jordon, Barbara Welch and Jim Crawford voted against it. But the recent arrest of another teacher has put the topic back on the agenda for consideration. Police charged Michael White, Jr., a physical education teacher at Cedar Grove Middle School, with possession with intent to deliver various drugs. State Police said they pulled over a car driven by White on May 26 to give the driver a traffic violation. Troopers said they found several bags of marijuana and cocaine packaged for sale in White's car. State Police officials said they then searched the teacher's home and found more drugs. White was charged with possession with intent to deliver cocaine, marijuana and two prescription drugs. Talk of a stricter drug-testing policy in Kanawha County started last year after Pratt Elementary Principal David Anderson was charged with cocaine possession in October and was suspended from his job. Anderson was acquitted by a Kanawha County Magistrate Court jury in February and returned to his post as principal. But his arrest was the impetus for the school board to consider expanding its drug-testing program. Under the proposed policy, all employees in "safety-sensitive" positions, including board members and upper-level administrators, would be subject to random testing. Often, it is a single incident, such as Anderson's, that initiates discussion of developing a stricter drug-testing policy, said Lisa Soronen, senior staff attorney for the National School Boards Association. "It's usually sparked by an incident in the school or by an employee," Soronen said. "That's the more common experience. But then there's the question of, is it really a problem or was it just a one-time thing?" Soronen said she has had considerably more inquiries on employee drug testing from school board attorneys in recent months. But in most cases, school systems briefly discuss the idea and leave it at that, she said. "They might look into it," she said. "But looking into it is a lot different than actually deciding to do it and develop a policy. "It's one of those things that is easy to look at, but hard to decide how to do it. Because then they think of the expense and the constitutional issues involved." In Kanawha County, board members have said they are worried about the cost. In Hawaii, school officials have expressed similar concern. "It depends on the form of testing, whether it's an oral swab test or if they use a cup," said Knudsen, of Hawaii's education department. Then, there's the question of the test's reliability, he said. "If it comes up positive, there would have to be a series of confirmation tests, and those costs could run into the hundreds (of dollars)," Knudsen said. A routine, negative test might cost only $15 to $20, he said. Like school officials in Hawaii, education leaders in West Virginia are worried about the possibility of false positives -- and mounting legal bills. Jordon commented last month that a false positive on a drug screening could quickly ruin an employee's reputation. "It's one of those topics right now that people have a lot of reservations about," Soronen said. Kanawha County's drug-testing policy will be discussed at a meeting July 26. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath