Pubdate: Tue, 12 Feb 2008 Source: Courier News (Bridgewater, NJ) Copyright: 2008 Courier News Contact: http://www.c-n.com/c-n/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2163 Author: Pamela Sroka-Holzmann Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) RECENT ARRESTS FUEL DRUG TESTING DEBATE IN HILLSBORO HILLSBOROUGH -- A community debate about whether to implement random drug testing of district students grew more intense Monday as school board members discussed the recent arrests of several teenagers on drug charges. The board last month approved the first reading of a random student drug-testing policy, 6-3, and is expected to take a final vote on it Feb. 25. No additional action on the proposal occurred at Monday's school board meeting by Courier News deadlines. The meeting was at Auten Road Intermediate School. The board's discussion gained steam as members discussed a 16-year-old Hillsborough High School student who was recently arrested and charged with possessing a quarter pound of marijuana, with intent to distribute. Somerset County Prosecutor Wayne J. Forrest and Hillsborough Police Chief Paul Kaminsky announced the arrest late last month, after a two-month investigation by the prosecutor's office's Organized Crime and Narcotics Task Force and township police. Officers seized the marijuana as well as $1,788 in cash and drug-packaging materials, Forrest had said. The juvenile has since been lodged at a juvenile detention center. Then on Feb. 6, five Hunterdon County teenagers were transported to nearby hospitals following a serious motor vehicle accident at the intersection of Dukes Parkway and Roycefield Road. While treating the 18-year-old driver at the scene, authorities found eight plastic bags of suspected marijuana and 19 unidentified pills in the driver's pants pocket, according to police. Police also said a small amount of marijuana was found on the vehicle's floor. The five teenagers had just attended a funeral Mass and burial of a 16-year-old Hunterdon Central Regional High School student who reportedly died from a drug-related incident in late January. Board member Greg Gillette said he had read the student's obituary and noted that the death occurred despite Hunterdon Central's random drug-testing policy. Hillsborough's proposed policy would be modeled on Hunterdon Central's, which randomly chooses for testing those students participating in athletics, extracurricular activities and school clubs, and those who drive to school. The students could be selected more than once for testing. If approved, Hillsborough's random drug-testing policy would be introduced during the 2008-09 school year. The school board's policy committee began discussing random student drug testing about four years ago and revisited it again last year after an online study by the board found that 70 percent of 800 study participants favored random drug testing. Board member Mark Rosenburg said he was very concerned about the Hillsborough teenager's arrest, and suggested the board also consider requiring district staff and faculty members to be randomly tested for illegal drugs. "I don't know how many teachers would, but I will," said Rosenburg, who is not a teacher. "I will volunteer (to be tested)." Policy Committee Chairman David Kanaby had estimated that randomly drug-testing students would cost less than $9,000 or 0.01 percent of the 2008-09 school budget. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake