Pubdate: Thu, 11 Dec 2008 Source: State Journal, The (WV) Copyright: 2008 The State Journal Contact: http://www.statejournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2745 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) TEACHERS FUMBLE ON DRUG TESTING Teachers and their unions could better use their money to work with school board officials to develop a reasonable drug-testing program that assures the public that school employees are drug free. Two West Virginia teachers unions are suing the Kanawha County Board of Education over its plan to randomly drug test school employees. What a fiasco. The West Virginia Education Association, with support from the American Civil Liberties Union, has joined the American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia in arguing that the school board's policy would violate employees' rights, waste tax dollars and not improve student safety. The Kanawha County Commission has expressed interest in supporting the school board. Other public bodies across the state likely will want to watch this case to see what steps they can take to protect the public from drug-using employees. We'll overlook the teachers' arrogant public boast -- and public relations gaffe -- that their legal action would cause the school board to spend scarce taxpayer dollars. Instead, let's focus on a couple of relevant questions: Do taxpayers and parents have a right to expect public schools to provide a safe and secure environment in which drug-free educators teach our children? Given the responsibilities of public schools, how can anyone suggest that educators are not in "safety sensitive" positions? The answers are obvious. The public entrusts its children to school employees -- from bus drivers to cafeteria workers to classroom teachers. All come in contact with children, and all contribute to the school environment. Many American workers must take drug tests so they can work in safety sensitive positions. Public safety employees -- police officers and firefighters, for example -- and those who work in public transportation accept drug testing as part of their employment arrangement. That obviously means teachers are not being singled out. Drug abuse among teachers may be relatively low, but can their unions honestly say teachers uniquely have avoided the plague of drug use and that those who use drugs pose no risks to students? Can they also say that those drug-using teachers don't serve as poor role models? Teachers and their unions could better use their money to work with school board officials to develop a reasonable drug-testing program that assures the public that school employees are drug free. The teachers' willingness to help resolve this problem would go a long way toward rebuilding the good will they are squandering through their defiant and costly behavior. Absent such an approach, we'll just have to let the courts sort this out. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin