Pubdate: Wed, 29 Oct 2008 Source: Daily Comet (LA) Copyright: 2008 Comet-Press Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://dailycomet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1505 Author: Ben Lundin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Note: Letter writers must provide phone number for verification PROPOSAL TO DRUG TEST EDUCATORS DELAYED FOR TWO WEEKS THIBODAUX - A Lafourche Parish councilman pushing for random statewide drug tests for public-school teachers said he plans to expand his proposal to include council members and other government employees. Councilman Lindel Toups, who represents Gheens, has urged his fellow council members to send a formal request for random drug tests to the state Legislature. Council members were set to vote on the matter Tuesday night, but concerns that it may violate the U.S. Constitution prompted them to delay a decision for two weeks. Toups said Tuesday night that he plans to return with a broadened request seeking drug tests for all public-school and government employees, including anyone who's paid by state or parish tax dollars. "The people want this," Toups said, adding that about 85 percent of callers to a local radio station supported the move. Toups said a former public-school employee alerted him to heavy drug use among faculty, prompting his request. But school boards and many other government entities are regulated by the state, meaning tests can only be performed if the Legislature passes a law approving it. Civil-liberties groups say the move would violate the 14th and fourth amendments, which protect against search and seizure by government. Councilman Joe Fertitta said council members could be overstepping their responsibilities and challenging the nation's legal foundation. "Besides violating the fourth and 14th amendments, we have a School Board that should police their own employees," he said. "I would have to vote no." Toups fired back. "The School Board don't do it because they're scared. They claim it's political suicide," he said. "And anybody who don't want to vote for this resolution has to be scared of something or hiding something." In an interview last week, School Board spokesman Floyd Benoit said he approves of Toups' proposal, provided it comes with guidelines. "We could surely use some help and some guidelines and some policies," Benoit said, noting that drug use is equally prevalent among school employees as it is in the rest of society. Two educators interviewed disagreed. Eugene Dial, Nicholls State University's Student Affairs director, and South Lafourche High School Principal Mary Curole, said the schools' own policies are sufficient. If the council passes Toups' request and the Legislature follows suit, it is believed Louisiana would become the only state to administer random drug tests to government employees at every level. Hawaii had been the first and only state to with random drug-testing policies in the public schools. Hawaii Gov. Linda Lingle approved a short-lived policy in 2007 to subject 13,500 public-school employees, including teachers, librarians and many administrative workers, to random drug testing. It failed several months later, after the American Civil Liberties Union challenged the policy and the state's Education Board followed by refusing to approve $400,000 needed to administer drug tests. The ACLU said the proposal violated educators' constitutional right to privacy, was ineffective and costly. Attempts to reach the organization were unsuccessful. The Council's next meeting is scheduled for Nov. 11. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin