Source: Associated Press Pubdate: Wed, 5 Aug 1998 Note: Headline by MAP Editor HOUSE DRUG TESTING PLAN BLOCKED WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republican leaders have apparently quashed, at least for now, a plan by two Republican lawmakers to require drug testing of House members and their staffs. "We have a few well-placed people who don't want this," Rep. Joe Barton of Texas said Wednesday. Opponents of the plan, he complained, have erected "one obstacle after another." Barton, a cosponsor of the proposal with Rep. Gerald Solomon of New York, said the chairman of the House Republican Conference, Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, is refusing to allow the drug plan to be brought up for discussion. Majority Leader Dick Armey of Texas told reporters earlier there isn't time in the House schedule to take up the matter before the August recess, which begins Friday. "We are loaded up," Armey said. Barton and Solomon introduced a measure in June that would require all 435 members of the House of Representatives and their office staffs to undergo mandatory drug testing. Many lawmakers have complained that the measure is unnecessary and insulting. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski