Pubdate: Fri, 21 Nov 2008 Source: Charleston Daily Mail (WV) Copyright: 2008 Charleston Daily Mail Contact: http://www.dailymail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/76 Author: Ry Rivard Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) KANAWHA BOARD PLOWS AHEAD WITH DRUG TESTING OF TEACHERS Members Anticipate Long Battle, But Believe Victory Could Change National Thinking CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- The Kanawha County school board realizes it may be headed for a costly legal battle over teacher drug testing, but it hopes to emerge with a victory that could change legal thinking around the country. The five-member board on Thursday evening decided to go ahead with plans to randomly drug test teachers. Both supporters and opponents of the plan to drug test nearly a quarter of school employees a year starting in January expect the program to be promptly halted by a judge. Both sides anticipate a preliminary injunction to last for the several years it could take for the two sides to exhaust a series of lawsuits and appeals. Board members will go ahead with the plan, which they approved 4-1 last month, despite being told they were in for a "nasty, costly" court fight over a testing policy that is "clearly unconstitutional." "The board's decision is, at the end of the day, 'Is this worth it?' " said Adam Wolf, an attorney from the national office of the American Civil Liberties Union. Board members clearly think the law is not so clear-cut. They argue that teachers, staff and administrators who look after children every day should be held to the same standard as police officers with firearms, nuclear power plant engineers, airline pilots and bus drivers - all groups of employees that courts have agreed hold safety-sensitive jobs and can be subject to some kind of suspicionless testing. Board member Bill Raglin compared the board members to those who "pushed the bubble" to integrate schools. "Someone at some point needs to test the water," he later said. The school system's drug policy faces challenges on two fronts. West Virginia University law school professor Bob Bastress told the board that West Virginia courts aren't on its side. "There will be a lawsuit," he told the board. "And you will lose." Wolf said federal law isn't in the policy's favor either. "It just seems like it's flatly unconstitutional," he said. But both Wolf and Bastress agree with the school system that "safety-sensitive" workers are generally permitted by courts to be tested for drugs without suspicion. The board and its lawyers argue that teachers have safety-sensitive jobs. At least one court, the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, has said it considers safety-sensitive a "group of professionals to whom we entrust young children for a prolonged period of time on a daily basis." But the court noted it did not favor random testing. A judge is likely to grant teacher organizations and the civil rights group an injunction that halts the drug testing until lawsuits and appeals wind their way through the courts. However, if it doesn't, the county plans to begin tests in January. The county would test about 830 of the 3,300 employees it now considers safety-sensitive, including teachers, service personnel and administrators. Those tests would be given over the nine months school is in session. A year's worth of testing is expected to cost nearly $40,000. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin