Pubdate: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 Source: Press-Register (Mobile, AL) Copyright: 2008 Mobile Register Contact: http://www.al.com/mobileregister/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/269 Author: Casandra Andrews Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) PUBLIC SCHOOLS MAY BEGIN RANDOM DRUG TESTING Random Screenings Could Start In August Mobile County Public School Superintendent Roy Nichols said Thursday that he's moving forward with a plan to randomly test certain students for drugs as early as August. "It looks like we probably will begin student drug testing next (school) year," he told the Press Club of Mobile during a lunch meeting Thursday, during which he also discussed his first 90 days in office. "The main reason is as a deterrent, to give the students a reason with their peers not to experiment with drugs." The topic came up on Tuesday, Nichols said, after a meeting where 20 students were expelled from Mobile schools. "More than half were for drug-related charges," he said. Drugs also played a role in most of the other expulsions, he was told. By Thursday morning, Nichols had met with a committee that included representatives from Baldwin County schools and McGill-Toolen Catholic High School to talk about the logistics of implementing a drug-testing plan. Students at McGill and in Baldwin County schools are already tested for drugs. Nichols asked the committee to make a recommendation for a drug-testing program by May 15, adding that he plans to bring the matter to a vote of the school board later in May. While Baldwin County public schools randomly test certain students for drugs, not everyone is included because of student privacy issues. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that only public school students who take part in extracurricular activities can be tested for drugs. The Baldwin system established its testing program in 2006 at Gulf Shores High and Gulf Shores Middle schools, after a survey revealed that seventh-through 12th-graders were using drugs at higher rates than state and national averages. The Baldwin program now includes schools for seventh-through 12th-graders. Nichols said he would recommend adopting a similar plan for Mobile County's public high schools. He said he expects the testing to cost about $100,000 a year, adding that a local foundation has said it could cover the costs. The superintendent did not identify the organization. Mobile United, a local community leadership group, has pushed for drug testing in Mobile County public schools for at least a decade, according to Executive Director Sandi Forbus. Her group, however, is not the one mentioned by Nichols, she said. "We couldn't be more pleased," she said of the news that drug testing may soon begin. "Aside from the danger to all of our kids, drugs are affecting our job market. It has wide-ranging implications. The only way we have to stop drug use is through random drug testing." The results of a Press-Register/University of South Alabama poll taken last year suggested that 90 percent of Mobile County residents support drug testing in public schools. Besides McGill-Toolen, several other private schools in south Alabama including Faith Academy, St. Paul's Episcopal School, Cottage Hill Academy and Bayside Academy have been drug testing students for several years. Mary G. Montgomery High School in Semmes took part in a pilot program in 2004 by testing its baseball players for drug use. That program was funded by the Mobile County Sheriff's Office. The school's principal said last year that no players ever tested positive and that the testing ended when the money ran out. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom