Pubdate: Mon, 20 May 2013 Source: Express-Times, The (PA) Copyright: 2013 The Express-Times Contact: http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/opinion/sendaletter/ Website: http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/expresstimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1489 Author: Sara K. Satullo BANGOR AREA SCHOOL BOARD SIGNS OFF ON RANDOM EMPLOYEE DRUG TESTING POLICY The Bangor Area School Board tonight approved a random drug testing policy for all of its employees, but it won't go into effect unless the teachers union agrees to it. The district already screens potential new hires before making a job offer, and state law allows testing of employees who seem to be intoxicated on school grounds. Earlier this year, district administrators agreed to undergo random testing and now officials wish to expand testing to all employees. Bangor officials have said they think the policy would make Bangor the first district in Pennsylvania to randomly test employees. The Pennsylvania School Boards Association did not return a message seeking comment. The Pennsylvania State Education Association could not immediately say if any other district randomly tests teachers. In New Jersey, school boards can opt to make drug testing part of the pre-employment screening as well as if there's reasonable suspicion, said Michael Yaple, a spokesman with the New Jersey School Boards Association. He doesn't think any organization tracks random testing. "Our sense is you don't see it much, if at all," Yaple said. "It is something you would negotiate." Bangor Area Education Association President Kevin Lilly said tonight his union remains open to the idea as the district and teachers continue negotiating and ironing out the details of the new contract. The union would have to vote to approve the testing, Lilly said. Both district officials and teachers agreed to push the contract expiration date forward from Aug. 31 to June 30. The community has pushed the board to implement a random drug testing policy but no one has been more vocal than Dawn Riso, mother of 24-year-old Gina Riso, a district teacher who died from a heroin overdose in December 2009 in the apartment of former Bangor Area High School assistant wrestling coach Brad Washburn. Board members were initially reluctant to consider the policy for fear it would be struck down in court. But teachers agreed to negotiate the issue. Wearing a T-shirt with her daughter's portrait, Riso attended tonight's meeting imploring board members to do the right thing as she showed them photos of her daughter. If the district had a random drug testing policy in place five years ago, her daughter would still be alive, Riso said. "That was not my daughter's nature," she said. After the vote, Riso said she was a bit confused with the board's action since the policy has no teeth without teacher support. She'll feel a lot better once the union votes in favor of it, she said. "If it's not (passed) I'm not stopping there," she said. "I'm not done. I'm trying to make something good out of something bad." Former school board member Ron Angle said it may be an unusual suggestion coming from him but he thinks the board should've held off on passing a policy and offered it as a "carrot" in contract talks. He questioned how many times an employee has been suspected of being under the influence and was tested, which officials couldn't answer. "The answer will be zero," Angle said, calling the state law allowing such testing "valueless." Board member Frank Addessi voted against the testing policy. Before the vote, he pointed out to the board that random testing doesn't mean 100 percent of all employees will ever be tested. "Random drug testing is an illusion," Addessi said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom