Pubdate: Tue, 17 Jul 2007 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2007 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) VERNONIA PONDERS POT AGAIN The case of a wayward principal reignites debate about drug use in the Columbia County community Aaron Miller must have had an awful feeling in his stomach when a Clatsop County sheriff's deputy approached him in a public park this month and asked him, "Have you been smoking pot?" Miller said yes, which wouldn't be news except that a) he is an elementary school principal in the Vernonia School District, and b) the district argued all the way to the Supreme Court in 1995 that it had the right to test all student-athletes for illegal drug use. The court agreed. Schools Superintendent Kenneth Cox says he supports Miller, who will be disciplined but won't lose his job. Miller and Cox promise to speak publicly about the charge later, but both are waiting for Miller's court hearing next month. Other bits of context: Illegal drugs, including marijuana, are a high-profile issue in Vernonia and the surrounding area. For example, a postal carrier in Vernonia was recently arrested and charged with distributing pot from his delivery truck. Vernonia police conduct drug raids and seize marijuana. On the other hand, marijuana is legal to smoke for certain medical conditions, and it's not uncommon at many public gatherings, as well as on college campuses and in private homes. The Clatsop County district attorney has applauded Oregon's "sensible approach" to treating marijuana possession in small amounts as an offense on par with a speeding ticket. So Miller's conduct and his boss's defense of him are caught in crosscurrents about society's attitude toward recreational use of marijuana, about the way Vernonia schools view illegal drugs, about the difference between adults and minors, and between people in public employment and positions of leadership and those who are expected to serve under them. Should Miller's misdeed be shrugged off, or should it cause him to lose his job leading students and staff in the Vernonia School District? The district's rush to defend him and to say that his job is safe strikes us as the wrong impulse. How can a district that has, quite literally, made a federal case about the use of illegal drugs by students ignore the same offense by an adult who is charged with supervising them? How can anything the district says about avoiding drugs in the future be taken seriously by students, parents or staff? How can the district continue to justify its no-tolerance policy toward student-athletes who are found to take illegal drugs? An alternative approach for the district might have been to start by saying that Miller's job is in jeopardy, but no formal action will be taken until the case is finished. He might be allowed to keep his job, the district could have said, but only following an airing with all the stakeholders in public schools -- parents, students and staff. And Miller still would have to be disciplined and make a public apology. That would have muted the concerns about a double standard and kept the pressure on Miller and his bosses to set an appropriate example for the district's students. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek