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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Plan For Drug Tests Dropped
Title:US CA: Plan For Drug Tests Dropped
Published On:2002-04-01
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-30 20:44:26
PLAN FOR DRUG TESTS DROPPED

Weighing fears of a drug epidemic against civil liberties, school district
trustees in Modoc County abandoned the idea Tuesday of requiring annual
drug tests of all high school students.

Instead, the Modoc Joint Unified School District board will renew efforts
to train teachers to spot teens on narcotics and bolster the high school's
anti-drug education program.

The board also signaled during its 4-0 vote that it has no intention of
revisiting the issue, even after the U.S. Supreme Court rules later this
year on an Oklahoma case that could allow tougher tests on the nation's
high school campuses. "They were unanimous in not wanting to give the
policy further consideration," said Kevin Jolly, the district
superintendent. "They want to support the kids instead with good activities
and encourage them to be drug-free."

The testing plan had squarely divided folks in Alturas, the seat of this
rural county in California's northeast corner and home to Modoc High's 300
students.

During an initial hearing on the idea several weeks ago, supporters of
blanket drug testing turned out in force, voicing concerns that the high
school was plagued by abuse. But at a second hearing, opponents decried the
proposal as an over-the-top tactic. Students, meanwhile, called it an
overreaction that proved parents lacked trust.

Tuesday night's hearing, attended by 50 people, also was dominated by
concerns about the costs, accuracy and attitude of distrust that testing
would project to students.

Missing from the hearing was Seab McDonald, the no-nonsense board chairman
who had championed broad drug tests of all high school pupils. McDonald was
out of town attending to funeral arrangements for his father, who died of a
heart attack over the weekend.

McDonald first raised the idea at the behest of Angel Williams, whose
son--a starting point guard for the Modoc Braves basketball
squad--confessed he had been smoking marijuana for two years. The son also
admitted that many of his peers used drugs, prompting his mother to phone
McDonald.

Recent events buttressed their concern. During the past winter, several
Modoc High wrestling and basketball team members were caught using or
selling drugs. Last month, sheriff's deputies arrested three students
caught smoking pot outside of town.

Experts, however, say drug use in the sparsely populated community (Modoc
County has 9,500 residents scattered across an area larger than Los Angeles
County) is typical of rural areas.

Drug testing has long been a controversial tactic in U.S. schools. In 1995,
the U.S. Supreme Court upheld drug tests for student athletes in an Oregon
case. Since 1998, 5% of schools have performed such tests, and 2% conduct
them on all students in after-school activities.
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