Pubdate: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 Source: Daily Reflector (Greenville, NC) Copyright: 2009 Daily Reflector Contact: http://www.reflector.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1456 DRUG TESTING - FUNDING, SUPPORT CRITICAL The Pitt County Board of Education's support for random drug testing of student athletes has potential for creating more awareness and accountability. But the program could meet cost and sustainability challenges at a time when adequately funding public schools is especially difficult. The drug-testing measure follows a pilot program that started last year at D. H. Conley High School. Principal Michael Lutz has called the program a valuable deterrent that helps students fight off peer pressure. The school board's policy requires that a minimum of one round of random testing be conducted for participants in each school sport with at least 10 percent of athletes being tested. The cost of the program must be borne by the school or student and parent organizations. The Associated Press recently reported that testing of high school athletes for steroid use in New Jersey, Florida, Texas and Illinois since 2006 resulted in only 20 positive test results out of 30,799. The AP contrasted that finding with 2007 and '08 surveys, conducted by the University of Michigan, which found that 2.2 percent of seniors said they had tried steroids at least once. Proponents of testing point to the low number of positive results none were recorded in a year of testing at D.H. Conley as proof of an effective deterrent. Others point to the same statistic to argue that low results from testing programs do not justify the expense. The funding method chosen for Pitt County relies on strong support from parents and boosters. That could be a problem for schools with a lower level of financial support in those areas. Every school deserves to have the same level of drug-prevention programs in place, and every school athlete deserves to benefit from the culture of accountability those programs can produce. At a time when a light of public scrutiny is illuminating drug use among professional athletes particularly performance-enhancing drugs expanding efforts to prevent young athletes from emulating that illegal and harmful behavior is necessary. The school board is right to approve an official drug-testing policy. The board's guidelines for funding, implementing and sustaining that policy may prove challenging. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart