Pubdate: Wed, 22 Oct 2008 Source: Advertiser-News, The (NJ) Copyright: 2008 Straus Newspapers Contact: http://www.strausnews.com/advertiser_news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4789 Author: Barrie Beaver DRUG TESTING POLICY MAKES SENSE After having read the feature (front page) article in the Vernon Advertiser-News of Thursday, Oct. 16, 2008, I felt a response was in order. Since the inception of Vernon High School some 30+ years ago, school boards of the past and evidently of the present, have failed to recognize and admit to the pervasive drug problem that exists today in the younger population of our culture and particularly in our high school student population including Vernon Twp. High School. In spite of their "head-in-the-sand" mentality, illegal drugs are bought and sold daily in our schools. Many other boards of education throughout New Jersey, those with progressive, forward-looking members with vision, take a proactive stance to such problems. Many have addressed the drug problem in our schools years ago and have attacked it head-on. They have created and implemented sound drug policies in an effort to stem student involvement in illegal drug use. When the legality of these policies has been tested, our courts have found that they do not violate the student's Fourth Amendment rights when applied as a requirement to participate in extracurricular activities. The last time I looked, the laws of New Jersey indicate that we are bound by those laws to provide an academic education. Participation in extracurricular activities, whether it be after-school clubs, intramurals, driving to school or as an athlete on one of our many athletic teams, is a privilege that students earn the right to be part of. At no time should these non-academic offerings be considered an entitlement. Considering the overwhelming support of our courts, including the N.J. Supreme Court, of similar drug policies developed over the past 20 or so years, I am appalled to read that our school board president, the leader of this esteemed group charged with overseeing the educational well-being of the children in our schools, a man with more than 35 years of experience in public education as a classroom teacher, as well as a school administrator and who has served this community as a school-board member for many years, would use this weak, sorely out-of-date excuse for not supporting this long-overdue drug-testing policy. Recognizing the pervasiveness of drug-use in our culture today, drug testing as a condition of employment, has become a common practice in the business community as well. Following the lead of the business world, Vernon's school leaders of the past have made it a requirement that prospective employees must pass a drug test if they wish to be employed in the Vernon Township Public Schools. As President of our school board, Mr. Howard Whidden should be enthusiastically encouraging the board to adopt this long-awaited policy instead of letting his liberal-minded, uninformed view become a stumbling block to its adoption. In the words of Mr. Charlie Smigen, a Vernon resident who spoke during the recent public discussion of this pending policy, "If this program saves even one child, then the program is worth it." This single statement regarding the safety and general well-being of our children should, by itself, be sufficient provocation for our school board to stop dragging their feet, and adopt this new drug policy without further procrastination. Barrie Beaver McAfee The writer is a former Vernon teacher, and had been a principal at the high school. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin