Pubdate: Sun, 30 Mar 2008 Source: Tribune, The (San Luis Obispo, CA) Copyright: 2008 The Tribune Contact: http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispo/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/391 Author: Leah Etling Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PASO HIGH TO GET FREE DRUG TESTS High-schoolers can sign up starting Monday; results will be sent to parents, not the school A drug testing program for students and teachers at Paso Robles High School aims to provide parents with incentives to get their children involved - and promises to give the results only to parents. The testing, set to begin Monday, is being organized by Partnership for Responsible Parenting, a North County nonprofit group that says it wants to give parents the tools to keep kids from alcohol, marijuana and other drugs. Paso Robles High School is the first public school to partner with the group. "Paso Robles is really being proactive and wanting to give kids an option to resist drug use," said Aurora William, cofounder of the nonprofit group. Paso Robles Public Schools spokesman Sheldon Smith said the district supports the program. "We certainly see eye to eye with Partnership for Responsible Parenting," Smith said. "It gives parents a method or vehicle by which they could talk to their students regarding drug abuse, gives stu- dents a reason to say 'no,' being that they could be randomly drug tested. It's good for parents; it's good for kids." The school will not receive the test results. "We're fine with those results going right to parents because that gives parents the opportunity to have a frank conversation with their kids about what they're doing outside of school," Smith said. It's not clear what would happen if a teacher tested positive for drugs. "Partnership for Responsible Parenting expects teachers to be drug free, and so do we (the district)," Smith said in an e-mail to The Tribune. Paso Robles has a student-athlete drug testing program and random drug testing for students on disciplinary contracts. According to a 2005 state-sponsored Healthy Kids survey of Paso Robles High students, 48 percent of 11th-graders and 19 percent of seventh-graders had consumed at least one alcoholic drink in the past 30 days. Among 11th-graders, 20 percent said they had smoked marijuana at least once in the past 30 days, as did 7 percent of seventh-graders. In San Luis Obispo County, the survey found that 40 percent of 11th-graders and 13 percent of seventh-graders had had at least one alcoholic drink in the past 30 days. Six percent of county seventh-graders and 20 percent of 11th-graders said they had smoked marijuana at least once in the past 30 days. Those numbers are alarming to William, who has four children from ages 13 to 24. She said she believes that kids need to be supported in their effort to resist experimenting. "Too many people think it's a rite of passage, and too many teens think it's the thing to do," she said. All of the program testing will be voluntary. Kids who sign up, get their friends or teachers to sign up or encourage prominent Paso Robles residents such as Mayor Frank Mecham or schools Superintendent Kathleen McNamara to participate will get raffle tickets for a prize drawing at the end of the year. They'll also receive freebies and discounts from local businesses for signing up. The group hopes to have 10 percent to 15 percent of the students sign up this year and increase the numbers next year. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath