Pubdate: Sun, 21 Nov 1999 Source: Sunday Telegraph (Australia) Contact: 2 Holt Street Surry Hills, NSW, 2010 Fax: (02) 9288-2300 SCHOOL SUSPENDS TEENS FOUR students from Castle Hill High, in Sydney's north-west, have been suspended indefinitely after being caught smoking marijuana on the school grounds. The 15- and 16-year-old students, three boys and one girl, were sent home last week by principal David Jaffe for breaking the school's tough anti-drug rules. They are the latest group of NSW students to be suspended or expelled for possessing, using or dealing marijuana. Six drug cases, resulting in the suspension of 40 students at both private and public schools have been reported this year, but the actual figure is believed to be much higher. Mr Jaffe said Castle Hill High was not the only school facing problems with marijuana. He estimated there had been as many as 50 suspensions for drugs in the Hornsby district this year. "Marijuana is a crime, but some teenagers don't seem to worry too much about that," Mr Jaffe said. "The amount of drugs that schools detect would be low compared to the number of students actually using them. "When we are conducting our enrolments for next year, the biggest question parents ask is whether the school is safe from drugs, but no school can say they are clear of the problem." The Castle Hills incident follows similar problems at some of Sydney's exclusive schools. Five students of Barker College were expelled or suspended in May for marijuana possession, and in March, nine girls from Pymble Ladies' College were expelled for smoking drugs at a party. The fate of the four suspended Castle Hill students will be decided after discussions with their parents. Five other students were suspended earlier this year because of a similar situation. In 1997, the Education Department ordered Mr Jaffe to reinstate two girls who were suspended from the school for allegedly dealing in drugs. Castle Hill High successfully lobbied Education Minister John Aquilina to let schools make their own decisions about such cases. Shadow education minister Patricia Forsythe said the increased number of students suspended for drug-related offences could reflect either an increase in activity or a crackdown by schools who have adopted a "zero-tolerance" attitude. The Drug Summit earlier this year recommended better funding for education programs, which will now begin in primary schools in an attempt to curb the problem. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea