Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 2009 Source: China Daily (China) Copyright: 2009 China Daily Contact: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4379 Author: Colleen Lee Allow More Kinds Of Drug-Testing In Schools: Union HONG KONG: A major teachers' union has suggested Tai Po secondary schools be allowed to carry out the planned student drug testing program in their own ways and then report their results to the government. Cheung Man-kwong, the president of the Professional Teachers' Union, said the government can spend the next few months consulting with the education sector and come up with feasible proposals of how to implement the trial. He said schools should be allowed to decide individually how, when and where to carry out the drug tests and in what conditions students should be subject to testing. "We will then be able to find out the good and bad approaches and work out a scheme that entails the good practices," he said. The union's vice-president (internal affairs) Fung Wai-wah said schools committed to the trial can be placed in groups using different approaches to the testing. Then, the government could compare outcomes after a certain period of time. He said under the union proposal, schools can kick off their test programs at different times and maintain them for varying periods. The schemes could be reviewed some time later, probably about a year after the schemes commenced, said Fung. Ng Siu-ki, the principal of the H.K. & Kowloon Kaifong Women's Association Sun Fong Chung College in Tai Po, said he is worried different approaches by different schools are likely to run up the costs of the program. He said he is open to giving schools discretion on start-up dates and rewards for students who come up clean on the drug tests. On the question of whether to inform the police of students' test results, Ng said school principals and teachers should examine the matter, case by case. "If students plan to start anew and don't know much about the drug source, we may consider not telling the police at once," he said. "If they get involved in triad societies or drug syndicates, I will see no reason why we don't inform the police." Meanwhile, some youth rights concern groups called on Tai Po secondary school students to put up a unified wall of resistance to the drug-testing program. Kong Kwai-sang, the convener of the Youth Union, a group with about 20 youngsters dedicated to expressing the view of young people on social issues, said they will hand out booklets in Tai Po from Sunday onwards calling on students not to join the program. The group may also set up information boards in Tai Po to get out the message. Group member Joe Ip Ping-lam said, "All students will be treated like suspected drug abusers in the program. It shows that authorities do not trust students at all ... Some teens resort to drugs as they lack care and support. The testing trial is not going to solve the root of the problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr