Pubdate: Thu, 27 Dec 2001
Source: Beaumont Enterprise (TX)
Copyright: 2001 Beaumont Enterprise
Contact:  http://www.beaumontenterprise.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1024

NEWTON DECISION STILL TROUBLESOME

The only thing worse than a government agency that acts contrary to the 
greater public good is one that keeps trying to, even after it is 
rightfully challenged.

The Newton school district has taken a good step by replacing mandatory 
drug-testing with random screening, but one aspect of the new policy is 
still troublesome.

Under the policy adopted by trustees last week, students in grades six 
through 12 volunteer with a guardian's written consent to go into a pool 
from which 10 names will be drawn each month for testing. So far, so good, 
and certainly better than the policy that had parents and students 
protesting its intrusiveness in September.

The problem with the new policy is that once in the pool, students who 
withdraw will be suspended from extracurricular activities and driving on 
campus for the rest of the year, the same discipline those who test 
positive will receive. That is tantamount to a presumption of guilt, and it 
punishes someone for the exercise of a fundamental constitutional right.

As we have said many times before, illegal drug use is stupid and 
potentially deadly. It should never be condoned, and those who use drugs 
must get help. But the law recognizes and requires a right way.

Wayne Haglund, the Newton trustees' attorney, said that as long as testing 
is voluntary, "I do not recognize a constitutional issue." He should look 
harder.
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MAP posted-by: Beth