Pubdate: Thu, 09 Oct 2003 Source: Standard-Times (MA) Page: A1 Copyright: 2003 The Standard-Times Contact: http://www.s-t.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/422 Author: Ray Henry, Standard-Times Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) DRUG TESTING URGED FOR STUDENTS NEW BEDFORD -- President Bush's drug czar told New England governors yesterday that more children in the region are dependent on illegal drugs than in any other area in the nation. John Walters, director of the Office of Drug Control Policy, speaking at the Faneuil Hall summit, singled out New England's high rate of heroin use. "It is a big business," Karen Tandy, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, told the governors and the assembled audience. "You might as well be sitting at the border of Colombia in this Northeast region." In response, Mr. Walters, who is charged with setting national drug policy, called on leaders to stem the heroin epidemic by testing students for drugs. "This is a tool that will make a difference," Mr. Walters said. "Its time has come." Heroin as cheap as $4 per bag has made it easier for young people to get hooked, Mr. Walters said. In New Bedford, detectives said prices range from $5 to $6 if a user buys a packet of 10 bags. The number of adults admitted for heroin treatment in New Bedford jumped almost 161 percent from 1995-2002, according to statistics from the state Department of Public Health. The cheap prices correspond to a greater supply. High-level heroin traffickers are transporting drugs directly to New England, bypassing the traditional transport route through New York City, and are marketing heroin directly to children, Ms. Tandy said. But educators said a national policy of testing high school students for drug use might be unnecessary. "We really haven't had a problem in the past with anything even remotely resembling that problem," said Steve Pettey, the principal of Dartmouth Middle School. "We haven't seen the need to do that." Some schools in the nation test students involved in extracurricular activities or sports. However, Mr. Pettey said he believes any drug testing regimen would have to include all students to be fair. "If you're going to drug test athletes ... you better test the chess club, the band," he said. Jean Cote, principal of Fairhaven High School, has similar views. Although he believes drug use outside schools regionwide potentially could filter inside the classroom, he has not seen evidence that his students are particularly afflicted. The school does not conduct random tests, but the building is occasionally swept by drug sniffing dogs from the Bristol County Sheriff's Department, he said. Lawyers for the state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union immediately raised objections to any form of random drug tests for students. The U.S. and state constitutions provide protection from unreasonable police searches, ACLU staff attorney Sarah Wunsch said. "Any public school that is listening to this advice is making a big mistake," she said, referring to Mr. Walters' testing proposal. She is unaware of any school system in the state that has randomly tested its students. The ACLU, she said, has successfully fought similar policies implemented for officers in the Boston Police Department and workers at Motorola. "I have serious doubts about the legality of making it this broad in the public schools," she said. Vern Rudolph, a recovered heroin user, has a teenager in New Bedford High School. Parents, he said, are more important than any testing regimen. "The best thing you can do is ask" your children, he said. The Associated Press contributed to this story. This story appeared on Page A1 of The Standard-Times on October 9, 2003. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom