Pubdate: Thu, 19 Jul 2007 Source: Herald News (West Paterson, NJ) Copyright: 2007 North Jersey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.northjersey.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2911 Author: Ruth Padawer, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) SCHOOLS WARN N.J. RULES COULD END DRUG TESTING Drug testing rules proposed by the state Board of Education would make it harder and more costly for districts to randomly test students, local and White House officials testified Wednesday in Trenton. The rules would not require districts to test students, but would stipulate that those that do screen teenagers must conduct and analyze the tests at state-licensed laboratories, or become state-licensed labs themselves. Any costs associated with drug testing would fall to the district. Currently, most of the 20 districts in the state that screen students rely on school nurses to conduct and analyze the tests. Results that aren't clearly negative are sent to a lab for further evaluation. School administrators from Pequannock and elsewhere told the Board of Education that the department's rigorous certification requirements could dismantle testing programs in the state -- programs they say deter drug use. John Graf, who directs Pequannock's aggressive testing program, said state education officials' "misplaced caution ... flies against the intent of both the state's judicial and legislative support for random student testing." Lisa Brady, superintendent of Hunterdon Central Regional High School in Flemington -- where school nurses have collected urine and saliva for drug tests since 1997 -- blasted the proposed regulations as a "huge and unnecessary stumbling block ... that will waste taxpayer dollars and hinder schools in their efforts to keep teens away from drugs." And Dr. Bertha Madras, who helps run the Bush administration's anti-drug efforts, testified that the proposed rules are too restrictive and burdensome. She pointed to the White House's grant program, which has awarded millions of dollars to schools to finance random drug screening, as a model the state should follow. "The federal program is flexible," said Madras. "That flexibility in choice is a major component in the overall success of the grant program." The proposal covers only students in Grades 9-12. It would not preclude testing of younger students, nor would it impose restrictions on how their specimens are collected or analyzed, said Susan Martz, director of educational support services for the state Education Department. The Department of Education proposed the rules at the behest of the Legislature, which maintains that random drug testing may dissuade students from using drugs. "The issue for us is whether schools are really affording kids the protection they need," said Martz. "We have to balance that against whether the regulations impose undue burdens on the districts." Though less than 10 percent of the state's high school districts randomly test their students, the figure has been steadily rising since 2002, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that schools could test students as long as it didn't interfere with a student's right to academic instruction. To work around that restriction, towns such as Pequannock require random testing of any student involved in extracurricular activities, including sports. Students who use the school parking lot, considered another privilege, also are subject to testing. Wayne, North Bergen and Secaucus also screen students regularly. Other districts, including River Dell and Fort Lee, have considered joining them. The tests screen for marijuana, cocaine and a variety of other narcotics. A growing number of schools, including Pequannock, are also testing for alcohol, using tests so sensitive that they can determine on Monday whether students consumed alcohol the previous Friday night. If tests are positive, parents are notified but police are not. Those students are barred from school activities until they receive counseling and pass a subsequent test. Roseanne Scotti, director of the Drug Policy Alliance of New Jersey, was the only speaker to testify in favor of the proposed regulations. "These policies and procedures are critical to ensuring that the random drug testing that is done in our schools is of the highest quality and the least prone to errors that might cause false positives or false negatives." According to the 2005 New Jersey Student Health Survey, 79 percent of students have consumed alcohol and 36 percent have tried marijuana. In the 30 days prior to the survey, 46 percent of students drank alcohol and 20 percent used marijuana. Opponents of random drug screening did not testify at the hearing, but have voiced concern in the past. Few dispute the wisdom of districts testing students suspected of being intoxicated while at school. But civil liberties advocates and medical groups, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, say testing all students randomly amounts to a "Big Brother" intrusion into private lives outside of school. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath