Pubdate: Mon, 13 Dec 2010 Source: Foster's Daily Democrat (Dover, NH) Copyright: 2010 Geo. J. Foster Co. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/mYsCsdPU Website: http://www.fosters.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/160 Author: Aimee Lockhardt Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs) DRUG SEARCH AT SPAULDING HIGH RECEIVES MIXED REVIEWS FROM PARENTS, STUDENTS ROCHESTER -- Drug dog services were brought to Spaulding High School for the first time this school year in early December, Superintendent Mike Hopkins told the School Board Thursday. A routine locker and classroom search was conducted, and Hopkins explained the district has been doing drug searches for around six years now and it serves as a reminder to students of the "no drug" policy. At Thursday's School Board meeting, resident Michelle Paradiso expressed displeasure with this action, saying she was upset to hear her son and his classmates were removed from their classroom so the police and dogs could search their belongings. "Our children are treated like they're guilty," she said. "Just because it's something done before doesn't make it right or lawful." Paradiso argued that she felt her son's and his classmates' rights were being violated. "Nowhere does it state that an individual's rights or school's doesn't count," she said. "Our children are not wards of the state. Your job is to educate them." But Hopkins explained the searches were constitutional and legal and were not a search of property. "When you walk into any public area, anyone can check (your belongings)," he said During a routine search, an administrator will enter a classroom and ask the students to line up in the hall outside the classroom leaving their belongings behind. The police and dogs will then go through the line of students and into the classroom sniffing around. No bags or lockers are opened and no students are searched unless there are signs of drugs. "We want to find and stop drug use as soon as possible," he said. If drugs are found, Hopkins said it becomes an administrative issue and that no police have ever been involved. The next day, students from Spaulding voiced their agreement with Hopkins. "It's not private property," Senior Derek Roberson, 17, said. "It's a public school system. They have every right to ask us not to bring drugs and to do a search." Senior Jacob Letourneau, 18, agreed. "They're not even going into our bags unless they smell something," he said. Letourneau said he feels the searches are useful to seek out any students in the area doing drugs. The boys did say that the searches, which are supposed to be random, should be kept more guarded. They said many students could find ways to hide their drugs because they learn when the searches are happening. Sophomore Leo Durocher, 15, said he had no problem at all with the searches and suggested: "The kids who are worried about it are probably the kids with the drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake