Pubdate: Tue, 1 Jul 2008 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Copyright: 2008 The Hartford Courant Contact: http://www.courant.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183 Author: Daniela Altimari Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) 30 ATTEND MEETING ON CANTON SCHOOL DRUG SWEEPS CANTON - - The 30 or so people who attended an informational meeting Monday on last month's controversial drug sweeps at Canton middle and high schools fell into two camps: those who support it and those who believe it went too far. "I applaud the superintendent for going forward with this search," said Sandy Sarmuk, a grandmother who is also a retired teacher. "The presence of the police in the building should be [a] comfort to every kid in the school." Others, including Elisa L. Villa, the mother and lawyer who organized the meeting, sharply disagreed. In their view, the searches chipped away at students' civil liberties, created a climate of fear and violated the school board's policy, which permits such searches only in response to a specific concern. Moreover, "everyone knows these things don't work," said Dr. Edward Kavle, a pediatrician in town. An educational campaign about the dangers of substance abuse and support for students coping with drugs and alcohol would prove far more effective, he said. But others cautioned against vilifying the police. "This is legal, what they did," said Peter Getz, a retired Hartford police officer who lives in town. Instead of being traumatized by the presence of drug-sniffing police dogs, his daughter thought they were "cool," he said. Ever since June 5, when local police officers and dogs conducted a surprise search at the two schools, townspeople have engaged in passionate discussions in coffee shops and across dining room tables. On Monday, the conversation, heated at times, came to the Canton Community Center after Villa invited members of the public to air their views. She had hoped that school board Chairman Louis Daniels, Superintendent Kevin Case and Police Chief Lowell Humphrey would come, as well, but they did not attend. One person who did was the mother of the 16-year-old girl who was arrested on a marijuana charge. The girl remains traumatized and embarrassed by the episode, said her mother, who declined to provide her name, citing her daughter's still fragile state of mind. The mother said she does not condone drug use, but she and many other parents said they object to the techniques the police and the school system used. "My daughter paid a huge price. ... She was an example to all the other kids in the school," she said. "I personally feel my rights as a parent were completely ignored," said Harold Burbank, who said the sweeps are part of a larger infringement of civil liberties that includes the Patriot Act and other post-9/11 government actions. "I had to read about this in the newspaper. ... I think that's outrageous." The searches were based on a board policy adopted several years ago after extensive debate, said Larry Minichiello, a former board member who was chairman of the policy committee. "It wasn't something done on a whim," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake