Pubdate: Wed, 12 Mar 2008 Source: Daily Tribune, The (Royal Oak, MI) Copyright: 2008 The Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.dailytribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1579 Author: Catherine Kavanaugh TASK FORCE - DRUG TESTING WILL REDUCE PEER PRESSURE Parents Can Have Input At PTSA Meetings Through April ROYAL OAK - Becca Castle, an eighth-grader at Royal Oak Middle School, will sign up for voluntary drug testing when the district offers it in the fall. "I couldn't care less. I've got nothing to worry about," Castle said, "but I've seen some girls getting nervous. That makes me think random tests are a good idea." The school board plans to implement random drug testing at the start of the next school year for sixth-through 12th-graders who voluntarily sign a registration form with their parents indicating they want to participate. The board isn't scheduled to vote on the program until its May 8 or 22 meeting, but President Gary Briggs told the Save Our Youth Task Force on Tuesday the support is there. Briggs said he doesn't want to waste any time in educating the community about a program considered a proven way to help children say no to drugs. Castle said it will be easier for her to ignore peer pressure about drugs if she can point to the random testing. "It will be like a good excuse," Castle said. "You won't feel stupid to say, 'Hey, I signed the contract. I can't do drugs. I could get busted tomorrow.'" Peer pressure is the primary reason middle and high school students try drugs and often get hooked, according to Jack Salter, a task force member who works with youth on probation at the 44th District Court. "I'd say 99 percent of it is peer pressure," Salter said. "We need to stop the peer pressure." The tests will screen for 10 different groups of drugs, including prescription painkillers in urine samples of the randomly selected students. The results will be kept confidential. They will be returned to parents only and never to school officials or police. If a test comes back negative, parents will get a postcard in the mail. If a test comes back positive, parents will get a phone call from the drug testing agency and the specimen will be checked again to determine volume and frequency of drug use. Parents who get bad news and want to take action will be given information about counseling and treatment programs in the area. The registration forms will go out in the fall. Parents and students who want to opt out still must sign the document, but they can mark a box declining to participate. Either way, the simple task of signing the forms will start a dialogue about drug use between parents and students, according to advocates. That's another benefit of the program, said Becca's mother, Janie Castle, who also plans to sign the form. She said the issue already has been the topic of family discussions. "I walk a fine line trying to respect my children's privacy, but unfortunately this is the world we live in," Janie Castle said. "They obviously are feeling pressure and we've got to nip it early." Superintendent Thomas Moline, who also belongs to the task force, said district officials will be seeking more input from parents through PTSA meetings until the end of April. The middle school PTSA meets at 7 p.m. next Monday and the high school association at 7 p.m. March 31. In the meantime, Royal Oak High School students who support the effort will look at ways to roll out the program to their classmates with presentations to small groups. "It will be a lot more effective than me talking about why it's important to 1,800 students at once," Michael Greening, ROHS principal, said. He added students who will make the presentations are committed to the program. "I wouldn't say they are excited about it," Greening added. "They just seem matter of fact about it." Students at San Clemente High School in California have been dealing with similar registration forms and drug tests since 2001, when the program Royal Oak is implementing started out as the Capistrano Unified School District's Voluntary Drug Testing Program. San Clemente High School administrators polled 900 students about the program in 2005. Forty percent of freshman and 26 percent of all students used their participation to say no to drugs, according to the American School Board Journal. Another 17 percent of students who didn't enroll in the program said they still pointed to it when declining drug offers and 15 percent of students said they stopped using drugs after signing the registration form with their parents. Now in its seventh year, the program has spread to high schools in other states and has an endorsement from the White House Office of Drug Control and Policy. Word of its success prompted Royal Oak school officials to key in on it. At Royal Oak Middle School, parents and teachers will explain the program to students after they become familiar with it. "For this age group we need adults involved," ROMS counselor Michael Betman said. The drug tests are expected to cost about $40 per student. The task force hasn't figured out how they will pay for the tests. They may ask parents or the school district to cover the expense or seek business sponsors. Save Our Youth members began meeting two years ago in response to three 2005 heroin-related teen deaths in Royal Oak, Birmingham and Madison Heights and a marked increase in non-fatal overdoses recognized by the Royal Oak Fire Department. At the end of 2005 and in early 2006, firefighters responded to 17 drug overdoses in a two-month period in Royal Oak. Ten emergency runs were for heroin overdoses and six of those runs involved teens. Firefighters sounded the alarm about the problem and the task force formed soon afterward. Since then, Fire Chief Wil White, another task force member, said his department has responded to fewer teen drug overdoses. "The 19-and-under bracket is really reduced, almost nonexistent," White said. Task force members have made Royal Oak a safer community, according to Moline. He lauded their latest plan to deal with drug use saying, "You won't let it rear its ugly head again." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek