Pubdate: Tues, 10/12 1999 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 1999, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Forum: http://tampabayonline.net/interact/welcome.htm Section: Editorial DRUG TESTING FOR SELF-SUFFICIENCY Despite a lawsuit seeking to stop it, a pilot program mandating drug tests for welfare recipients began in Michigan on Oct. 1. The program, overseen by the state Family Independence Agency, is designed to help those on the dole get ready for the rules of the workplace, as well as to make sure the state isn't subsidizing drug use. Those who test positive will be offered treatment and will be denied benefits only if they refuse to be tested or treated. Still, there are those who prefer welfare as we have long known it. Civil libertarians and welfare rights activists claim such testing runs afoul of the Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizure. ``Forcing parents to choose between providing for their children and giving up their privacy rights is a giant step backward for public policy in Michigan,'' said Kary Moss, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan. Such thinking is in no way progressive because it's business as usual. The fact is that nearly half of the American work force is now tested for illegal drugs as a condition of employment. And if workers can be forced to take a drug test to be eligible to earn a paycheck, then it is not draconian to ask those receiving public aid to do the same. The object of this policy is not to punish drug-abusing parents. The goal is to get them ready for employment, which increasingly demands drug-free employees. This cannot be accomplished if the state inadvertently provides the cash for drugs. It also sends a message early that receiving a welfare check will not be a permanent lifestyle. For too long, irresponsible behavior, including reckless procreation, was subsidized by the state. There was little incentive to change, and generational dependency became the trend. In 1996 governors, Congress and the president all agreed that it was time for this to stop. The Michigan program and others that are sure to follow may possibly be ruled unconstitutional. So far the U.S. Supreme Court has been reluctant to sanction drug-testing programs where public safety is not at stake, but that shouldn't stop states from going through with policies they can clearly see are for the public good. The Michigan drug-testing program is progressive, not punitive. It is designed to help people turn their lives around. It will help them break the bonds of dependency - chemical and otherwise - to eventually lead independent lives. And that is the most fundamental right a civilized society can offer. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart