Pubdate: Wed, 01 Sep 2010 Source: Siskiyou Daily News (Yreka, CA) Copyright: 2010 GateHouse Media, Inc. Contact: http://www.siskiyoudaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/668 Author: Joshua Hall DRUG TESTING FORCES STUDENTS TO PROVE INNOCENCE Dear Editor, I am writing in regards to the Yreka High School drug testing article, which reported on data presented at a school board meeting. The data showed an increase in adolescent substance abuse between the years of 1990 to 1996. I would like to point out that those statistics are from 14 to 20 years ago. Current high school students were actually born during these years. We weren't teenagers then or responsible for the increase. I really don't understand why such outdated information is being used to push drug testing onto the YHS student body. If you look at current statistics, you will see the trend of teen illicit drug use generally increases from 1991 to 1999 and then decreases from 1999 to 2009 (National YRBS). Current students are actually a part of decreasing teen substance abuse. Additionally, current YHS students are making a positive impact in our community and world. We have raised test scores at YHS. We volunteer in local community service, teach agriculture to Siskiyou County fourth graders, coach younger sports teams, work as life guards at city pools, raise quality livestock sold annually at the fair, work as high school tutors, teach Sunday School classes, work as camp counselors, help the disabled, collect food for local food banks and more. We reach out to people in need worldwide by combating global slavery, combating human trafficking, helping impoverished in third world countries, serving in mission trips to third world countries and more. We do all of this with increased homework loads and greater sport practice demands. Mandatory drug testing forces students into proving their innocence. It focuses only on the negative rather than getting behind students and empowering our generation in the force for good we are. Personally, I find mandatory drug testing of students to be very disrespectful and suppressive. I'd rather be believed in as opposed to being convicted without having done anything wrong. By Joshua Hall - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D