Pubdate: Fri, 19 Nov 1999 Source: Tulsa World (OK) Copyright: 1999, World Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.tulsaworld.com/ Author: Chuck Ervin, LAWMAKERS LOOK AT STUDENT DRUG TESTING BY CHUCK ERVIN WORLD CAPITOL OKLAHOMA CITY - Lawmakers continued to wrestle Thursday with the issue of drug testing for Oklahoma students. A bill authorizing drug testing for all students who are involved in athletics and other extracurricular activities failed to pass during the last legislative session. But lawmakers plan to revisit the issue when they reconvene next February. A joint legislative task force studying the issue heard from David G. Evans, a New Jersey man who is chairman of the Drug-Free Schools Coalition. Evans told members of the task force at their Thursday meeting that the coalition now is in 10 to 15 states and is rapidly expanding. "Drug testing by itself is not adequate," Evans said. He said community and parental involvement in programs is essential to their success. The purpose of such programs, he said, shouldn't be to punish students but to get them into counseling and treatment programs. He said his daughter's 2,000- student New Jersey high school is not a problem school and has a fairly typical incidence of drug use. But he said some 90 students have tested positive for various drugs, including marijuana, heroin and cocaine. The school currently tests athletes and is expanding the testing program to include students in other extracurricular activities. Also under consideration is testing of students who have school parking permits. Evans said the federal courts have ruled that entire student bodies may not be tested. However, the courts have upheld ran dom testing of athletes on the grounds of safety and because participation in sports is voluntary, Evans said. He said testing students who have parking permits also is justifiable because of the safety issue. Sen. Bernest Cain, D-Oklahoma City, said he is concerned about what will happen to students who do test positive for drug use. "It might brand a kid for life," Cain said. "It might be worse than a kid smoking a joint. "There are a ton of people -- from the president on down -- who have smoked marijuana that turned out to be pretty good people," he said. Cain added that he believes school authorities would use positive drug tests as an excuse to expel students. Evans said programs to deter students from using drugs work only if there are consequences. But he said most students who test positive for drugs are removed from school only briefly and can return when they agree to go into counseling and treatment or other prescribed programs. "I have never said you should kick kids out of school," he said. Evans said a state law is necessary in order to reinforce a school's legal position and to protect administrators from lawsuits. A few school districts in Oklahoma, including Jenks, already conduct drug tests. Although the state has no law authorizing such tests, the districts administering them rely on out-of-state court rulings that have upheld drug tests. Chuck Ervin, World Capitol Bureau chief, can be reached at (405) 528-2465 or via e-mail at - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D