Pubdate: Thu, 23 Feb 2006
Source: Creston Valley Advance (CN BC)
Copyright: 2006 Sterling Newspapers Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.crestonvalley.com/advance/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1413
Author: Lorne Eckersley
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

POLICE DOG DOESN'T GET A SNIFF AT PCSS

There were smiles all around as principal Sharon Popoff thanked RCMP 
members for their visit to Prince Charles Secondary School on Feb. 
15. Several police officers and a dog trained to sniff out illegal 
drugs conducted a scent-only search of school lockers, finding no 
evidence of illicit contents.

"It's something parents are always asking for," Popoff said on 
Friday. "The parent advisory committee has requested the searches but 
it isn't always easy to get the dog and his handler over to Creston.

"I was pleased," Popoff said of the dog's failure to sniff out even a 
hint of drugs such as marijuana. "I had expected the dog would find something."

Popoff explained the police had been invited to conduct the search 
and a handler and dog arrived in Creston from Cranbrook , giving the 
school only a few hours' notice.

"They have to be here at our request unless there is a criminal 
issue," she said.

"We were very conscious of safety," Cpl. Rob Knapton said on Monday. 
"The search was conducted while classes were in session so that 
students weren't in the hallways."

Knapton said the police were as delighted with the search results as 
the school's principal.

"Students often have a negative perception with the public -- this is 
a positive story," he said.

The search, Knapton added, was "part of our commitment to ensure our 
schools are safe. It's part of our strategy to ensure we have safe 
homes and safe communities."

Popoff said the search wasn't a first, but that it hadn't been done 
"more than two or three times in my time here. There is no dog 
handler locally."

Safety is the key issue for school administration, she explained.

"I want kids who aren't (drug) users to come to school and feel safe. 
We'll continue to pursue this and other strategies with the police," she said.

"We have a lot of positive things happening in our school. The 
results of this search is just one of them."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom