Pubdate: Tue, 17 May 2005
Source: Gloucester Daily Times (MA)
Copyright: 2005 Essex County Newspapers, Incorporated.
Contact: http://www.salemnews.com/email/#Editor-g
Website: http://www.gloucestertimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/169
Author: Dan  Touhy
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

STATE OFFERS FUNDING TO SCHOOLS FOR DRUG TESTING

BOSTON - The state will give schools $100,000 to launch voluntary student 
drug testing as part of a new strategy released yesterday to combat drug 
and alcohol abuse.

The testing is billed as the linchpin for redoubled prevention efforts to 
head off epidemic levels of drug abuse, notably OxyContin and heroin abuse. 
Salem School Superintendent Herbert Levine, who joined Lt. Gov. Kerry 
Healey in unveiling the plan, said students would have to take the tests if 
a district  voluntarily decides to implement the program. He recounted his 
experience in helping his 20-year-old son battle an OxyContin addiction. 
And he said his son said testing would have scared him away from taking 
opiates.

"I don't think that student testing is necessarily the answer to all of the 
problem," Levine said. "But it is an answer, it's another arrow in the 
quiver for us in education to be able to help parents."

Healey said it would target a trend among younger and younger students 
trying and taking drugs. She said 12.9 years old is the average age in 
Massachusetts  for someone first using marijuana.

However, the Massachusetts chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union 
said there is no evidence student drug testing works.

"What is voluntary about it?" asked Sarah Wunsch, staff attorney for 
ACLU-Massachusetts. "The kids may have some rights here that would be 
violated." Wunsch said the state would be better off spending more on 
education and treatment, including a needle exchange program.

The plan concentrates on four areas: prevention, early intervention, 
enforcement and accountability. It would be funded through a $9.1 million 
supplemental budget bill the Romney administration filed earlier this year. 
The supplemental budget would help the state leverage $14.5 million in 
matching  federal money. Healey said an additional 6,000 to 8,000 people 
would get detox services, out of an estimated 40,000 who now need services 
but do not seek or get services. In  2004, 82,440 people received publicly 
funded treatment services. The plan includes $50,000 per school in targeted 
communities for police resource officers.

In deference to local control, Healey said the state would provide the 
support should districts and communities want to launch a drug-testing 
program. "We want science-based programming, things that we know work," 
Healey said. "We will not be reinventing the wheel here. We're going to be 
doing things that  we know worked in other communities."

Levine said districts could make the testing acceptable or even attractive 
without making it punitive. He said a voluntary drug-testing program could 
be launched as early as 2006, though he will not be around to see it 
because he is  scheduled to retire June 30.

"Some folks have an issue with student drug testing under any 
circumstances," Levine said. "There are others who would support it under 
any circumstances. What we're trying to do is find a balance."

Prevention now accounts for only about 11 percent of the $250 million spent 
annually on substance abuse services in Massachusetts. The plan draws 
extensively from information gathered over the past year, when Healey 
traveled the state and met with school officials, parents, health 
care  advocates and law enforcement officials. Some of the information came 
from regional round-table discussions led by Essex County District Attorney 
Jonathan  W. Blodgett.

"We welcome any state support in coordinating ways to choke off these 
drugs," Blodgett said last night. He said early education and intervention 
are increasingly important in combating drug use and abuse among young 
people. Healey praised current enforcement efforts, but indicated the state 
could provide better coordination through the interagency council. The plan 
also calls for expanded treatment services for incarcerated individuals and 
a real-time response network at hospitals to better identify the drug abuse 
problem and numbers of overdoses.

Gov. Mitt Romney yesterday signed an executive order to establish an 
Interagency Council on Substance Abuse and Prevention, to be led by Healey, 
to coordinate efforts among 13 state agencies that now provide services. 
Romney also filed legislation to stiffen penalties for those convicted of 
making or distributing methamphetamine. The bill would make amphetamines 
manufacture and trafficking a felony, subject to up to five years in prison 
and $20,000 in fines.

Sen. Steven A. Tolman, D-Watertown, the chairman of the Legislature's new 
Committee on Mental Health and Substance Abuse, said methamphetamine is the 
next big battle facing Massachusetts after the OxyContin abuse. Tolman 
endorsed the new strategy and underscored his committee's support for 
prevention efforts.

"The first step is getting the message out to the children: Do not try this 
drug, it is a suicide pact," Tolman  said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom