Pubdate: Mon, 29 Dec 2008 Source: Herald-Dispatch, The (Huntington, WV) Copyright: 2008 The Herald-Dispatch Contact: http://www.hdonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1454 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) TEACHER DRUG TESTS RULED UNCONSTITUTIONAL CHARLESTON -- A federal judge on Monday stopped the Kanawha County school system from implementing a new drug testing policy, saying it would force teachers to submit to an unconstitutional and unjustified search. U.S. District Judge Robert Goodwin granted a temporary injunction sought by the American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia, which argued that the policy was illegal and unnecessary. The policy would have allowed random drug testing of 25 percent of Kanawha County's school employees, including teachers, each year. The Kanawha County Board of Education approved the policy in October and planned to implement it Jan. 1. Monday's injunction suspended the policy until a final ruling is made in the AFT-WV's lawsuit. Only a handful of school districts nationwide require random teacher drug testing of existing employees. Adam Wolf, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, said most attempts "have been rejected by the court at nearly every turn." While Goodwin's ruling is not binding outside Kanawha County, Wolf says it's reasoning should be. Goodwin rejected the school board's argument that the policy was needed because teachers hold safety sensitive jobs. He questioned why the board didn't also adopt a policy to test teachers for tropical diseases. "Total security for us and our children is only possible -- if unlikely -- in a totalitarian state," Goodwin said. "Who wants to live in a society when a government will stop at nothing to prevent bumps and bruises." The ACLU, which had joined AFT-WV in the case, praised Goodwin's decision. "Today's order affirms the constitutional rights of our public servants," Wolf said in a statement. "Random, suspicionless drug testing of teachers is unnecessary, ineffective and illegal. With today's order, we hope that the Board will finally reconsider its doomed policy and save the taxpayers any further expense." A call to the Kanawha County School Board's attorney was not immediately returned, but school board member Pete Thaw said he expects the board to eventually prevail. "I thought it was sad, here we are, trying to get a drug policy to protect the environment of the students and the teachers union is there fighting us when they should be holding our hand in unison," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doug