Pubdate: Mon, 29 Dec 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) FEDERAL JUDGE FREEZES, BLASTS TEACHER DRUG TESTING POLICY CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A federal judge halted the Kanawha County school system's plan to randomly drug test teachers. U.S. District Judge Joseph Robert Goodwin said the drug testing plan would force teachers to submit to an unconstitutional and unjustified search. He also gave a scathing rebuke of the policy and the school board that approved it. Goodwin said the Kanawha school system's plan to randomly test 25 percent of its teachers and other school personnel each year was made even though it does not appear that there is a pervasive drug problem in the county. He said that the school board's argument that something bad could happen while a teacher under the influence of drugs was supervising children was based on an unreasonable kind of worse-case-scenario thinking. Goodwin asked why the board had not also passed a policy to randomly test teachers for tropical diseases. "Total security for us and our children is only possible - if unlikely - in a totalitarian state," Goodwin said. He added, "Who wants to live in a society when a government will stop at nothing to prevent bumps and bruises." The policy, approved by a 4-1 school board vote in October, was to take effect Jan. 1. Board members were warned ahead of time that the county was in for a costly, nasty legal battle if they approved the testing plan. The board, citing pressure from voters and with an eye to the drug testing programs used by private companies, decided to go ahead with the policy. The West Virginia chapter of the American Federation of Teachers took the first legal action against the school board last month in county circuit court. The case was moved to federal court. Since then, the West Virginia Education Association has joined with AFT-WV to fight the policy. The school board also has supporters, including the Kanawha County Commission and the Fayette County school board. The Kanawha county case could be an important decision on what privacy rights government employees have and what opportunities government employers have to monitor employees' out-of-work activity. The school board says that teachers hold safety sensitive jobs and that if they are on drugs, their inability to correctly supervise a classroom can put students in danger. The teachers' organizations and the American Civil Liberties Union argue that teachers' are not like other safety sensitive government employees -- including bus drivers, police officers and workers at nuclear plants -- and that the school board's policy is unnecessarily intrusive. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin