Source: San Jose Mercury News Contact: Tue, 17 Feb 1998 Author: Bryan Monroe - Mercury News Staff Writer DRUG-DOG PLAN UNDER FIRE Milpitas administrators want to nip problem in schools before it grows The Milpitas Unified School District is considering a plan to turn drug-sniffing dogs loose in classrooms, hallways and parking lots, and irate students and parents are vowing to fight it. ``This won't make it more safe. It will just make students more frightened,'' said Adam Weinstein, 17, senior class treasurer at Milpitas High School. ``It makes it look as if we are heading more towards a prison than a school.'' While the district concedes it has some of the lowest drug-related incident rates in the state, the proposal has the support of most of the board and could be adopted as early as Feb. 24. Students' backpacks, lockers and vehicles would be subject to random, unannounced searches by specially trained dogs sensitive to the smell of drugs, alcohol or gunpowder. The students themselves would not be searched. The plan is virtually identical to a Sacramento-area school district policy challenged in federal court by the American Civil Liberties Union and eventually overturned after a Galt High School student refused to be searched. Milpitas district officials say there has not been a single drug- or alcohol-related expulsion in the past year, and the district has the lowest number among county schools for drug-related incidents. But administrators - -- who have promised that all district schools would be free of drugs, alcohol and violence by 2002 -- are pushing the idea as a preventive measure. ``Yes, we're at the low end of what happens at schools regarding the issue of drug use,'' said Charles Gary, principal at Milpitas High. ``But why wait until there is a real problem? We have to be proactive.'' Gary said some students have come to him complaining of drugs on campus, and students have dubbed a park across the street from the school ``Stoner Park.'' If approved, the first dogs could be in Milpitas high schools and middle schools as early as April. That's when the district wants to begin demonstrating the dogs at work during school assemblies, to put students on notice of the policy. Full-scale searches would begin on campuses in the fall. Elementary schools would probably not be searched. The dogs cost $300 per visit. The district wants up to six visits this spring and as many as 20 random searches next school year. In a demonstration at a school board meeting last week, a handler from Interquest Detection Canines -- a private Houston-based company that conducts dog searches in 80 school districts around California -- showed off Bandit, a playful 18-month-old golden retriever. The dog successfully found a small bottle of vodka hidden in a planter in the room, pawing on the container until it was rewarded with a treat. Christine Moore, a senior handler with Interquest, said her dogs are trained to seek out the smell of alcohol, illegal and over-the-counter drugs, and gunpowder. She says a dog's sense of smell is 1,000 times more sensitive than a human's. ``They think, in their mind, they are looking for their toy,'' she said as Bandit actively sniffed the room. ``He just thinks we are playing hide-and-go-seek.'' The practice of using drug-sniffing dogs in schools came under fire recently when the Galt Unified School district, near Sacramento, contracted with Interquest to do random searches of its classrooms and property. Dogs would search rows of students' lockers or groups of vehicles parked in student parking lots. Classroom searches The dogs and a handler would also enter a classroom, unannounced, and ask students to step out, leaving their backpacks, jackets and other belongings behind. The dogs would then sniff the room and ``hit'' on any contraband. One student, Jacob Reed, refused to leave behind his belongings when the dogs entered his senior criminal-studies class last February. He was taken to the office and threatened with suspension. He then allowed the search, and nothing was found. The next day, Reed and his teacher contacted the ACLU, which filed suit in federal court alleging the district violated the student's rights against unreasonable search and seizure. A month later, the district terminated its policy, canceled its contract with Interquest, and settled with the ACLU, agreeing to pay $35,000 in legal fees. ``The fact that I refused a search doesn't mean I should be searched, '' said Reed, who now has a Web site at http://www.softcom.net/users/kareed/ and is leading a nationwide campaign against drug-sniffing dogs at school. ``I didn't see the logic in it.'' Los Gatos limits dog use The dogs have also been used at Los Gatos High School for the past year but are limited to locker and parking-lot searches. Los Gatos High does not do the unannounced classroom searches, according to Craig Heimbichner, assistant principal. ``You need some individualized suspicion before you can subject a student to that kind of search,'' said John Heller, an ACLU cooperating attorney who represented Reed in the Galt case. ``Students don't give up all their rights when they pass through the schoolroom doors.'' But Milpitas' Principal Gary disagrees: ``Students have no rights of privacy here at school, especially when it comes in conflict with the rights of the whole.'' The ACLU says it can't get involved in the Milpitas issue until the policy is approved and a student, teacher or parent files a complaint. Other area schools using the dogs include Monte Vista Christian School in Watsonville and the Monterey Peninsula Unified School District. State and federal courts are unclear about drug-sniffing dogs in schools. But the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1985 that students are subject to a lesser standard for searches at school -- ``reasonable suspicion, '' rather than the legally stronger ``probable cause'' standard. Wrong message sent But, either way, some parents and students think the dogs send the wrong message. ``This seems to me to be a knee-jerk reaction,'' said Mike Mendizabal, a parent and a member of the Community Board Advisory Council. ``I don't see the situation as being that bad in this district.'' Members of the Milpitas High School Student Congress, who voted against the idea 46-8, agree. ``It's like, when you drive down a really nice neighborhood, and see one house with bars on the windows,'' said Eleanor Mangusing, senior class president. ``It makes you think there's a crime problem in the neighborhood, even if there isn't. People will now look at the school and say, `Wow, they have a drug problem there.' ''