Pubdate: Thu, 10 Nov 2005 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2005 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Contact: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/162 Author: Terry Webster, Star-Telegram Staff Writer PARENTS OFFERED FREE KITS FOR HOME DRUG TESTS JUSTIN - Northwest school district officials began handing out free at-home drug-testing kits this week to parents of middle school students who ask for them, making Northwest one the few districts in north Texas that endorses drug testing for preteens. The nonprofit organization that supplies the free kits was founded by an Arizona couple who also own the company that sells the kits. District officials said they received about 150 of the 300 kits they requested from the nonprofit group, notMYkid, which says the Northwest program is its first in Texas. The group has started its program in schools in Nebraska, Georgia, Pennsylvania, California and Kentucky, and is hoping to provide kits to schools in every state, organizers said. The nonprofit Arizona group was founded in 2000 by Debbie and Steve Moak. In 2004, Steve Moak bought First Check, the California company that sells the kits. During a presentation at Pike Middle School on Monday, Debbie Moak told a group of Northwest parents that drug prevention is her "sole motivation." But Moak said later in an interview that the program could eventually be a way for First Check to make money. She said she and her husband started notMYkid after their experience with their son, now 26, who began using drugs as a high school freshman and ultimately ended up in rehabilitation. Initially she did not notice anything unusual about his behavior. "He was a model student," she said. If drug-testing kits had been available to her, she might have been able to intervene, Moak said. "This is new technology," Moak said of the home kits. She compared the partnership between notMYkid and First Check to computer companies' donations of equipment to schools. "They're doing it because it's the right thing to do," she said. "At the same time, they're hoping to eventually make money off of it." Ashley Birkett, 13, a Pike seventh-grader, said she wouldn't mind if her mother, Renee, gave her one of the drug tests. "I think it's a good idea," she said. "And I don't think that other kids would mind." Several Tarrant County school districts have drug-testing programs, but Northwest is the only one in the area offering the voluntary home kits. For example, Eagle Mountain-Saginaw has mandatory testing for students in grades seven through 12 who participate in extracurricular activities. Grapevine-Colleyville has testing only for high school students; it is mandatory for students who participate in extracurricular activities and voluntary for any student whose parent requests it. In Northwest, First Check donates the kits that notMYkid provides, but only while supplies last. Then parents would have to buy the kits, which sell for $27.99 on the notMYkid Web site. The kit detects marijuana, cocaine, opiates and methamphetamine. Debbie Moak said she recommends that parents test every six weeks. The schools do not see test results. If parents want detailed results, they can request them from the company's lab. A parent told the school district about the program, said Cindy Brown, Northwest executive director for student services, who approved the program's presentations in the schools. Northwest officials said they saw no conflict of interest after researching the program. While notMYkid typically offers the drug kits for seventh-graders, it opened up the Northwest program to parents of all middle school students, Brown said. There are 2,034 middle school students in the district. Dozens of kits were distributed at Northwest's three middle schools this week, school officials said "I think this is as far as I would want the school district to take it," said Debbie Thomas, Northwest school board president, of the district allowing the presentation. "I think it's a parent's decision." The school board did not vote to offer the program, Thomas said. She said she was not familiar with the company and declined to comment further. Parents who didn't attend the presentations Monday and Tuesday at Northwest will be able to request kits from assistant principals at the middle schools, Brown said. But parents first will be directed to a Web site to view a slide show of the drug-prevention presentation. "But it's not just advocating drug testing for kids; there is a prevention part with it, as well," Brown said. Cindi Saporito of Fort Worth, whose child attends Pike Middle School, said: "The best part of this is that it offers students a way out of taking drugs. "It's also a great way to bring the subject up of why you shouldn't use drugs." Health officials caution that drug-testing kits are not a cure-all for drug abuse. "Parenting is tough work, and it means constantly communicating with your children and making sure of what they are doing," said Eric Niedermayer, executive director of the Tarrant Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse in Fort Worth. "If it's at a point where drug tests are necessary, then the family probably needs counseling," he said. Drug testing is just one tool, he said. "I would not encourage any parent to be confident that because they occasionally use it, or that because it sits on their table, that it's a speech about not using drugs," Niedermayer said. Few school districts in Texas offer student drug-testing programs. Arlington and Fort Worth do not. In a 2004 survey by University Interscholastic League, 242 Texas superintendents said their schools test for drugs, while 773 said they do not. Area schools offer an array of drug-prevention programs, but few offer drug testing. In Grapevine-Colleyville, results from mandatory random drug testing are reported to the district. Results from the voluntary program are sent only to parents. Several parents have opted for the voluntary testing this year, said Dana Drew, interim director of special assignments in Grapevine-Colleyville. Eagle Mountain-Saginaw, White Settlement, Burleson, Granbury, Azle, Cleburne and Joshua districts offer student drug-testing programs. But Fort Worth, Arlington and Birdville school officials said they are not considering drug testing. "The community hasn't expressed a need or a desire for us to do that," said Mark Thomas, Birdville spokesman. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman