Pubdate: Sun, 14 Sep 2008 Source: Tribune, The (San Luis Obispo, CA) Copyright: 2008 The Tribune Contact: http://www.sanluisobispo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/391 Author: Nick Wilson Cited: San Luis Coastal school board http://www.slcusd.org/pages/schoolboard Cited: ACLU http://www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/testing/index.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs) SAN LUIS COASTAL TO REVIEW RANDOM DRUG-SEARCH PLANS The San Luis Coastal school board is expected Tuesday to discuss two separate proposals to perform random searches using drug-sniffing dogs on campus and random testing for students participating in all extracurricular activities. The proposals, if approved, would make San Luis Coastal the fourth school district in the county to test students for drugs. But it would be the largest district to do so. Paso Robles, Shandon and Templeton schools drug-test athletes before allowing participation in sports. Board member Kathryn Eisendrath-Rogers said she wanted the district to look into the idea because she was alarmed at the numbers of San Luis Coastal students who reported using drugs and alcohol. Statistics on substance abuse were accumulated in fall 2007 as part of the California Healthy Kids Survey. The annual survey asks fifth, seventh, ninth and 11th graders about their own, their parents' and their friends' experiences with alcohol, tobacco, illegal drugs and sex, as well as safety at school and other lifestyle issues. About 73 percent of the district's high school freshmen and 62 percent of juniors participated in the survey, according to district Student Services Director Jackie Kirk-Martinez. Parents must approve student participation. Of the freshmen, 18 percent reported using marijuana at least once and 11 percent said they had used it in the 30 days prior to the survey, Kirk- Martinez said. Of the high school juniors, 42 percent reporting using marijuana at least once and 24 percent reported using the drug in the prior 30 days. The proposals could raise legal issues. Because drug searches could lead to lawsuits from students and their families, district officials suggest that the school board have its legal counsel review any proposed policies before they are implemented. The proposed use of drug-sniffing dogs on school property apparently presents more legal obstacles than random testing, officials said. The district's staff report to the board on the issue notes that the state Attorney General's Office ruled against a similar proposal in November 2000 that would have allowed school administrators to use dogs to sniff students' personal belongings and then search their possessions without their consent. "The attorney general concluded that school administrators may not implement such a policy," district Personnel Services Director Rick Robinett wrote. The American Civil Liberties Union also has threatened to sue school districts that use drug-sniffing dogs on campuses. Such a policy could be a Fourth Amendment search-and-seizure violation, according to the organization. The U. S. Supreme Court has found in a case involving a school district that a drug problem must be severe before a search of any type is warranted, according to San Luis Coastal officials. But random drug testing for students in extracurricular activities has been upheld in cases brought before the high court, according to the district staff report to the board. Testing in sports, and possibly other extracurricular activities, is the option with seemingly fewer legal challenges. Eisendrath-Rogers said that when she brought the issue before district officials, she initially suggested only that student athletes be tested on school campuses. "Peers and other kids tend to look up to those students," she said. "We already ask them to sign a contract (stating they won't use drugs). We're not trying to create a police state here as much as to help them avoid peer pressure." The cost of any drug search program hasn't yet been determined. But Eisendrath-Rogers said: "You can't put a dollar figure" on saving a student from the downfalls of drug abuse. [sidebar] MEETING TUESDAY The San Luis Coastal Unified School District board is set to discuss two separate plans to perform random drug searches and drug testing for extracurricular activities when it meets at 7 p. m. Tuesday at Los Osos Middle School, 1555 El Moro Ave. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake