Pubdate: Sat, 09 Sep 2006
Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Copyright: 2006 St. Petersburg Times
Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/letters/
Website: http://www.sptimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419
Author: Tom Marshall
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

A HIGH-TECH HUNT FOR SCHOOL DRUGS

After a positive test, Hernando County schools look at  buying a
machine that is used at airports. Privacy  issues are a concern.

BROOKSVILLE - Fresh from the war on terror, "puffer"  technology
designed to detect explosives at U.S.  airports could soon be used to
combat drugs in Hernando  County schools.

Hernando school officials are looking at buying an  Itemiser 3, which
GE Security bills as a desktop system  able to detect explosives and
narcotics.

If the School Board approves the purchase, Hernando  schools would be
among the first in the nation to use  the $50,000 machine.

District officials tested the machine in January and  say they found
traces of drugs - including marijuana,  cocaine, methamphetamine and
heroin - on the handles of  classroom doors, student cars and lockers.

Officials say they would use the machine mainly to  focus on drug
education efforts. But positive tests  would be investigated further.

"We're not going after students," said Barry Crowley,  Hernando
Schools security director. "We're going after  drugs on campus."

Hernando students are among the state's most vulnerable  to drug use,
according to surveys in which students  detail their drug use habits.

In recent years the School Board has talked about  performing drug
tests and boosting its drug-education  offerings. But those plans have
often ground to a halt  over questions of student privacy.

Courts have held that schools may test students for  drugs if they're
involved in extracurricular  activities, but may not randomly test all
students. And  they can't search students unless they have a
"reasonable suspicion" of drug use.

That's where the new technology comes in.

The machine, GE says, is subtle enough to distinguish  between strong
and faint traces of drugs. A special  cloth is passed over a surface
and then inserted into  the machine, which "puffs" the cloth for signs
of drugs  or explosives.

"You can do doorknobs, you can do lockers, you can do  desktops or
bookbags," Crowley said. "It will tell you  whether drugs have come in
contact with that surface  and at what level. If the drugs actually
touched the  desk, there would be a higher level of reading."

A positive test alone would not be enough to make an  arrest. Further
investigation would be needed to link  someone to illegal drugs.

In the January tests, officials swabbed 10 lockers at  Central High
School and came up with five hits for  heroin, Crowley said. One was a
handprint-type shape,  and four were on the locks of adjacent lockers,
as if  someone were trying to open them.

They opened the lockers to test further, found nothing  and went no
further, Crowley said. None of the Hernando  tests led to an arrest.

"We wiped the books down. We wiped down the insides of  the locker,"
he said. "Those kids never knew we were  there."

Out in the parking lot, three car door handles tested  positive for
methamphetamine and cocaine. Officials  asked the students if they
could search inside, and  found no drugs inside the vehicles.

"There's absolutely a deterrent effect," Crowley said.  "The kids at
Central went nuts when they found out what  we were doing."

The machine also could be invaluable in helping  officials learn which
drugs are possibly being used in  schools, and whether employees such
as bus drivers are  possibly using them, he said.

"It surprised me," Crowley said. "I didn't think it was  going to be
that good."

He has proposed leasing a machine for $10,000 to try it  out for a
year, testing each building in the district  monthly.

The School Board is expected to vote on whether to buy  or lease the
machine early next year.

The district will consider the legal implications  before the board
takes it up.

GE officials said both urban and rural districts are  looking at the
machine, and a school district in East  Camden, N.J., purchased an
earlier hand-held model.

"It's really brand new to the school market," said Ray  Lauk, manager
of education marketing for GE Security.

"The error rate is less than a 2 percent false-positive  rate," he
said. "Poppy seeds do not set it off."  (Poppies are used in the
manufacturing of opium.)

Lauk, a former Illinois school superintendent, said the  technology
would make it possible for school officials  to make a historically
messy process more precise.

"Our efforts in schools to keep them safe and drug free  have largely
been centered on contraband falling out of  kids' pockets, kids
ratting out each other, rumors,  luck," he said. "We haven't had a
scientific way, an  objective way to go in and combat drugs in schools
  until now. That's what this does."

Rebecca Steele, director of the Tampa office of the  American Civil
Liberties Union, said the new technology  could pose new threats to
student privacy, particularly  if it registers a significant number of
false alerts.

"Technology is making us rethink the Fourth Amendment,"  she said.
"It's like Superman's X-ray vision."

But she added that schools might be within their rights  to use the
new technology in public places.

"You might not have a reasonable expectation of privacy  on the handle
of your locker," Steele said. "If it's  really very reliable
technology, I think it's OK to  test where students have no reasonable
expectation of  privacy."

Kirsten Krienes, chairwoman of the School Advisory  Committee at J.D.
Floyd Elementary School in Spring  Hill, said she could see the
potential for such a  device to be abused to conduct unlawful searches.

"How many people come in contact with a locker?" she asked.

But she said it could also deter students or staff from  using drugs
and help school officials target their  efforts.

"I think a machine like that, if used and calibrated  properly and not
abused, would be an asset," Krienes  said.

"(But) I wouldn't endorse it without knowing more about  it."
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MAP posted-by: Derek