The US Supreme Court has twice approved limited drug testing of
students, okaying it for athletes in 1995 and expanding its scope
to include students involved in extracurricular activities last
year. While those rulings opened the way for drug testing in the
schools, it is local school boards who must ultimately approve drug
testing programs or not. The battle over forcing high school kids
to urinate in a cup if they want to play football or join the debate
society is thus one that will be fought locally, school board by
school board.
With an eye toward replicating the positive outcome in Lebanon
in other school districts that may consider implementing a drug
testing program for students, DRCNet decided to take a closer look
at what happened with the Lebanon Community School District. The
board began considering implementing a drug testing policy over
the summer, but the battle heated up this month. In early August,
the board was considering two policies, one to test athletes and
the other to test students involved in extracurricular activities
at the beginning of the year, but there was also sentiment on the
board to push for a policy of random drug testing of those students
year round.
The drug testing program would have been based on a model program
drafted by the Oregon School Boards Association. The association
creates model policies to guide local school boards on any number
of education-related issues, said spokeswoman Shannon Priem. "Our
policy department keeps sample policies so boards can consider adopting
them," she told DRCNet. The drug testing model policy was updated
after last year's Supreme Court decision to let districts know that
testing could now include students involved in extracurricular activities,
she said.
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But that doesn't mean the association endorses drug testing,
Priem said. "We are merely helping boards stay abreast
of the law. All the decisions are made locally, and we just
help them know what the law is," she said. While Priem
said that the association did not track the number of districts
in the state with drug testing programs, it is believed to
be small. (The Monitoring the Future annual surveys of student
drug use last year estimated that only 5% of school districts
nationwide have suspicionless drug testing programs.)
"Each student wishing to participate in athletics [and/or
extracurricular activities] and the student's parent(s) shall
consent in writing to drug testing. No student shall be allowed
to participate in athletics [and/or extracurricular activities]
without that consent," says the model policy. Under the
model policy, students testing positive for drugs for the
first time will be given the option of attending a drug treatment
program or being barred from extracurricular activities. Subsequent
offenses under the model policy earn an automatic ineligibility
for extracurricular activities. In all cases, the student
and his parents must meet with the principal. The model policy
does not mention law enforcement.
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One board member, Dr. William Barish, criticized the proposed policies
early on, telling a local newspaper drug tests were really idiot
tests -- only an idiot would take drugs when he knew he was going
to be tested, said Barish. When that local press report came across
the desk of SSDP legislative director Ross Wilson at the national
office in Washington, Wilson sprang into action.
Ross Wilson in action during the primaries, Manchester, New Hampshire,
January 2004
(photo courtesy SSDP)
"I've been monitoring the news for the past month or so,"
Wilson told DRCNet. "As school comes back into session, school
boards all over the country are considering drug testing. I saw
a newspaper article saying that the district there was considering
a drug testing plan, but that there was some hesitance on the part
of board members," he explained. "The newspaper article
mentioned board member Dr. William Barish, who told the newspaper
it was an asinine idea. So I called him and explained who I was
and what SSDP was and told him I thought he was right and that we
wanted to send him some information."
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And thus a crucial connection was made. "I provided
arguments about why drug testing doesn't work and how it could
actually exacerbate existing drug problems," said Wilson.
"But it was the Monitoring the Future study that found
drug testing did not deter drug use that really got him interested."
That study reported: "Drug testing of students in schools
does not deter drug use. The research findings challenge the
premise that has been central to the rationale for schools
adopting a drug testing policy." According to the researchers,
investigators found "virtually identical" drug use
rates at schools that tested and schools that don't. The finding
hold true across grade levels, the research found.
"We think that one reason so few schools test their
students is that it is an expensive undertaking," said
lead Monitoring the Future researcher Lloyd Johnston. "Schools
are very pressed for funds, and I would say the results of
our investigation raise a serious question about whether drug
testing is a wise investment of their scarce resources. It's
also very controversial with parents and students," he
pointed out. "The way that drug testing has been carried
out in the schools looks very unpromising. I have no doubt
that one could design a drug testing program that would deter
teen drug use, but at what monetary cost and at what cost
in terms of intrusion into the privacy of our young people?"
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"We managed to open a dialogue with Barish," Wilson continued.
"He asked for more information, saying he needed more ammunition
for his arguments at the board. With our help, Barish went from
someone with doubts about drug testing to almost an activist against
it."
Unfortunately, Barish was away on vacation this week and unavailable
for comment, but school board chair Tom McHill confirmed to DRCNet
that Barish played the key role in mobilizing opposition to a district
drug testing program. "Dr. Barish was very important in questioning
the cost and effectiveness of a drug testing program," McHill
said. Those concerns eventually killed the plan, at least for now,
he added.
And while the Oregon School Boards Association says it is not advocating
drug testing, McHill told DRCNet it was the association's model
policy that first stirred the board's interest. "We have a
longstanding policy of using the summer months to consider policies
generated by the Oregon School Boards Association, so we were considering
enacting drug testing for athletes or students participating in
extracurricular activities."
But with the help of SSDP, Barish raised enough doubts to kill
the proposal -- at least for this year. "Our administration
has been fairly aggressive in ensuring that kids violating school
policies get appropriate punishments, but when it comes to drug
testing, the board decided that we need to find out where we are
and what our problems really are, so we've instructed the administration
to come back and tell us what is currently being done district-wide,"
said McHill. "I personally wasn't sure drug testing was the
best way to deal with this, and Dr. Barish was questioning not only
the cost of the policy, but what we are really trying to achieve
here. Are we trying to discourage drug use or just catch kids in
a way that is not helpful?"
Given all those concerns, the board voted not to adopt a drug testing
policy at this time, McHill said. "We want to make sure we're
doing the best job we can, and we're not ready to take that step
right now."
Lebanon, Oregon, students will be drug test-free for at least another
year, and SSDP's Wilson is looking for more school boards to influence.
"School board members I've talked to are not ideologues; they
have their hearts in the right place and just want their students
to stay away from drugs and drug addiction. It has been my experience
that they are open to new ideas, and they want to hear why it's
a bad idea even if they support it," he said. "School
board members sometimes tell me that even if drug testing doesn't
work, they implement it to be able to say they were doing something
about the problem. I respond by telling them there are smart, productive
things you can do that actually work, like taking that money and
hiring a substance abuse counselor, training parents how to talk
about drugs with their kids, or even working with the PTA."
Kudos to the Lebanon Community School District for taking a level-headed
approach to the issue -- and to SSDP's Wilson, not only for helping
one school district make the right decision, but also for reminding
us all what a little direct communication can achieve.
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