Pubdate: Thu, 27 Oct 2011 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2011 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/mVLAxQfA Website: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Michael Mayo, Sun Sentinel Columnist JUDGE MAKES RIGHT CALL IN HALTING FLORIDA WELFARE DRUG TESTING When it came to drug testing welfare applicants, the state aimed for the cup first and asked questions later. Anybody with a rudimentary understanding of the U.S. Constitution knew that Florida's blanket testing program was doomed. Michigan tried the same thing more than a decade ago, and it was ultimately tossed by federal courts. Sure enough, U.S. District Judge Mary Scriven temporarily halted Florida's drug-testing program this week, ruling that "there was a substantial likelihood" it wouldn't pass constitutional muster. Legal precedent shows that government drug testing must be based on reasonable suspicion, probable cause or public safety (such as testing police or transit workers). Not that these issues stopped Gov. Rick Scott (a lawyer) from pushing the program and the lawmakers in the Legislature from approving it earlier this year. The program, which began July 1, was particularly mean-spirited in requiring welfare applicants to pay for their own drug tests up front. Applicants get reimbursed after passing. "When you don't have any money, $30 is a lot," said one applicant, a mother of two going through a divorce who didn't want her name used. An aide to State Rep. Irv Slosberg, D-Boca Raton, wrote a personal check so she could take the test. Before Scriven stopped the program, around 7,000 TANF applicants passed drug tests and only 33 flunked. That's a miniscule failure rate, less than one-half of 1 percent. More intriguing were the nearly 1,600 applicants who didn't show up for tests in the required 45-day window from July through September. That's 19 percent, a big chunk. The state says these applicants "refused" drug tests. I wonder how many simply didn't have the means to pay for the test, or the wherewithal to get to the testing lab. I'm not naive. I know some who skipped the test might have been drug users. But it's unfair to point to these 1,600 no-shows and imply they're all guilty of something. That was the problem with this program. Unlike so many others who get government aid, like college students and foster parents, the onus was on welfare applicants alone to prove they were clean. If the goal was to stop government funds from being used on drugs, this approach seemed inconsistent and unfair. The real goal seemed to be scoring cheap political points at the expense of a weak and easily scapegoated target. In her ruling, Scriven took the state to task for ignoring past court decisions and the results of a past Florida drug-testing program, which showed welfare drug use below the general population. Unlike private companies, who are free to test employees or applicants as they see fit, the law is stricter when it comes to government testing because of the Fourth Amendment, which bans unreasonable searches. Drug testing welfare applicants has been one of Gov. Scott's more popular crusades, triggering widespread support. But Judge Scriven, a George W. Bush appointee, has shown that what's popular isn't always right. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.