Pubdate: Wed, 22 Oct 2008 Source: Daily News-Record, The (VA) Copyright: 2008 The Daily News-Record Contact: http://www.dnronline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1519 Author: Jenny Jones Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) NO DECISION ON DRUG TESTING YET School Board Looks At Lynchburg Example HARRISONBURG - The City School Board heard another presentation about random student drug testing during its meeting Tuesday, but it did not vote on the measure. The school board began exploring random testing in June, after learning of alleged drug use by Harrisonburg High School football players. Craig Mackail, supervisor of research, planning and instruction for city schools, made the presentation Tuesday night. In doing so, Mackail provided information about local drug-testing agencies and talked about how other school divisions, namely Lynchburg, handle such testing. Three local agencies - Rockingham Memorial Hospital, Emergicare and Labcorp - offer drug testing. Each agency does urine-sample drug testing and would require students to take the tests at its facility, Mackail said. RMH charges $45, Labcorp $45.50 and Emergicare $49 for each test. Each agency tacks on an additional fee for steroid tests, he said. If the school division implements random drug testing, a to-be-determined percentage of students who participate in extracurricular activities would be tested monthly or weekly, Mackail said. In Lynchburg, 5 percent of student athletes are randomly tested each week during the season until all athletes are tested. And a team is selected at random each week until all teams are tested. According to Lynchburg's policy, a student who tests positive the first time is banned from participating in sports until a retest shows a negative result. After a second positive, athletes cannot participate in sports for 365 days, and, after a third, they can consider their high school athletic career over. In addition to briefing the school board on the local drug-testing agencies and Lynchburg's policy, Mackail also discussed drug use among city school students. Citing a 2006-07 student survey about drug, alcohol and tobacco use among students, Mackail said the division's annual illicit drug use among students is 6.5 percent below the national average. More than 350 students in eighth, 10th and 12th grades completed the survey. After listening to Mackail's presentation, board members made a few comments, but no one was ready to proceed with a motion. "The topic is certainly a very contentious, very complex one that should include community input," said Tom Mendez, vice chairman of the School Board. "It's hard to get your hands around how big is the problem ... how significant is the problem in our schools." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin