Pubdate: 5 May 1999 Source: Mercury, The (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 1999 Contact: 93 Macquarie Street, Hobart, Tasmania 7000 Australia Fax: (03) 62 300 711 Website: http://www.themercury.com.au/ Author: Ellen Whinnett DRUGS RAID AT SCHOOL - PRINCIPAL CALLS IN POLICE A TASMANIAN high school principal said yesterday he had received nothing but praise for his decision to call in police with sniffer dogs to check students' bags for drugs. The bust happened at Brooks High School in Launceston's northern suburbs late last week. Principal Dennis Betts confirmed yesterday that the police had attended the school at his request. The 520 students at the school had their bags checked by dogs, with one student caught with marijuana. A spokeswoman for Education Minister Paula Wriedt said it was the first time a Tasmanian school had asked police to conduct such a raid. The spokeswoman said the decision had nothing to do with the minister and such decisions were up to individuals schools. Three drug squad detectives and two trained sniffer dogs and their handlers, on loan from Customs, conducted the raid on Thursday. Mr Betts said he had asked the police to attend the school to send a strong message to the students and the school community. "It was at my request and done with the full support of the school council," he said. "I did it not because I thought the school was full of drug users and drug abusers. "I did it because I wanted to send a message ... that school ought to be a drug-free place. "No one has the right to bring drugs to school. "This was not a statement that Brooks is full of drugs." Mr Betts said he had received only positive feedback from parents and the community. "The officers from the drug bureau and the detector dogs from the Australian Customs Service came and had a walk-through of the entire school," he said. "They inspected school-bags in corridors and outside. In the very last bag they checked they recovered a very small amount of marijuana in the possession of a student." Mr Betts declined to give the student's gender, age or grade, saying the details were not relevant. The police had given the student a formal caution and the school would also take disciplinary action. Mr Betts also said 98% of Brooks High students agreed with the concept that schools should be drug-free. "There was a degree of excitement and interest (when the police arrived) but no sense of outrage, shock or dismay," he said. "I think they appreciated what was going on. Every single comment I have had has been entirely positive." Opposition education spokeswoman Sue Napier agreed with the no-drugs policy in schools but said there needed to be a policy covering drug checks in government schools. There could be problems for school heads or teachers if a common approach was not taken across all government schools, she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski