Pubdate: Thu, 11 Dec 2008 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2008 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Ericka Mellon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) SHOULD TEACHERS BE DRUG-TESTED? Recent Arrests Have Some Calling On HISD, Others To Revisit Stance On Pre-Employment Screening For many job applicants, whether the work involves driving trucks or answering phones, passing a drug test is a given. That's not the case for Texas public school teachers. The state does not require teachers to take drug tests before being hired, and local school districts aren't mandating the tests on their own. Officials with several districts - including the Houston Independent School District, San Antonio ISD and Alief ISD - cited cost as one major reason they skip pre-employment drug screens for teachers. But with the recent drug arrests of more than a dozen HISD employees, some advocates are calling on districts to revisit their hiring practices. "School teachers - next to parents, and in some cases, above parents - are the strongest role model in a child's life," said Calvina Fay, executive director of the Drug Free America Foundation. "If there's ever an employee that we should be looking that they're drug free, it should be teachers." State Rep. Rob Eissler, who chairs the House Public Education Committee, said he would support studying mandatory drug screening for teaching applicants. More than 300,000 teachers currently work in the state's public schools. "It's something we should look at," said Eissler, R-The Woodlands. "Let's see what the testimony turns up and what's the practicality. You certainly want to protect the children. That's our top priority." Bus drivers tested Under federal law, school districts already have to conduct pre-employment and random drug tests of bus drivers. Some local districts, including HISD, also have policies allowing drug testing of teachers and other employees during the school year if they suspect use. Earlier this week, HISD Superintendent Abelardo Saavedra announced plans to crack down on employees with drugs. He did not go so far as requiring drug tests for teachers, but the district plans to dispatch drug-sniffing dogs to all 300 or so schools to search employee parking lots. Saavedra's move follows the arrests of at least 15 HISD employees, mostly teachers, accused of having marijuana or undocumented prescription drugs in their cars at school. Elneita Hutchins-Taylor, HISD's general counsel, said the district administration hasn't considered mandatory drug tests for teaching applicants at this point. "We just have not found it necessary to do that," she said, noting that the district already conducts criminal background checks on all job applicants plus annual checks on current employees. "There would certainly be a lot of cost associated with that." The drug tests for bus drivers cost HISD up to $28 each. If the district were to test the 1,500 or so new teachers it hires a year, the price tag would be $42,000. Testing all 28,000 current employees would cost $784,000. HISD school board president Harvin Moore said he isn't opposed to pre-employment drug tests for teachers, though he hadn't studied the cost. "I certainly think teachers should be clean from illegal drugs," he said, "and I don't have any problem with a drug test being administered prior to hire if it's legal." Officials with the Texas Education Agency, which oversees public schools, said they could find no state law prohibiting drug testing of teaching applicants. A new state law mandating fingerprinting and national background checks of most public school employees doesn't address the issue either. In light of the problems in HISD, Alief school board president Sarah Winkler said she would consider initiating a discussion in her district about expanding drug screens to teaching applicants. "I think most of our teachers feel it's an important enough issue that they would be willing to do it pre-employment," said Winkler, president-elect of the Texas Association of School Boards. "Random testing, I think there would be privacy issues. I don't know I'd want to go there." Gayle Fallon, president of the Houston Federation of Teachers in HISD, said she isn't overly concerned about drug tests for applicants. "Our concern is the current employees." But Chuck Robinson, who runs the Congress of Houston Teachers, said he doubted the tests would be worth the cost. "That's just a snapshot in time. Someone could pass something like that and then go back to their bad habits." City, county require it The city and Harris County government both require applicants to pass drug tests before they're hired for any job. "We are known as an employer with a tough drug policy, so it eliminates a lot of people from even applying," said Candy Clarke Aldridge, acting human resources director for the city, which has about 22,000 employees. In 2008, she said, of all the drug tests conducted on city applicants and employees, 1.65 percent came back positive for drugs. About 55 percent of U.S. companies drug-test job applicants, according to the most recent survey from the American Management Association. Steve Werner, a professor of management at the University of Houston's Bauer College of Business, said the issue of drug-testing teachers is tricky. "Certainly you could make the argument, especially if you find there's a problem, that drug testing would be warranted," he said. "On the other hand, it is a professional occupation, and the drug testing itself - the most common method is a urinalysis - is invasive; it's embarrassing." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin