Pubdate: Fri, 19 May 2006
Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO)
Copyright: 2006 St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Contact:  http://www.stltoday.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/418
Author: Shane Anthony
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

HOWELL STUDENTS MAY FACE DRUG TEST

High school and middle school students in the Francis  Howell School
District could be tested for drug use  next school year.

The district board voted Thursday night to request  proposals for a
mandatory, random drug testing policy  and to set three meetings to
discuss it with district  parents.

If the policy is approved, it would affect all students  who are
involved in extracurricular activities and  those who have parking
passes. Middle school students  could participate in a voluntary
program if their  parents agreed.

The program would require students and parents to agree  to the
testing program before a student would be  allowed to participate in
extracurricular activities or  receive a parking pass.

The program still would have to receive final approval  from the
board, probably in June, administrators said.

Jim Joyce, a spokesman for the district, who presented  the program,
said it would be separate from the  district's discipline policies. It
is not intended to  punish students, he said; rather, it is intended
to  help them stop using drugs.

The cost is estimated at $28,000 for the high school  and $24,500 at
the middle school level. Joyce said  another $50,000 or so might be
required for  administration, bringing the total cost to about
$100,000. Some grant money may be available, perhaps by  2007-2008.

At the three high schools, students would be chosen at  random each
week to submit to a urine test. The test  would be conducted in a
secure bathroom at the nurse's  station, Joyce said, and the testing
company would be  at the school to receive the sample.

The program would test for controlled substances  including marijuana,
opiates, cocaine,  methamphetamines, benzodiazepines, ecstasy and
anabolic  steroids.

If a student tested positive, he or she would be  removed from
extracurricular activities and have his or  her parking pass revoked
for 10 school days and would  be required to attend counseling for a
minimum of four  weeks through Bridgeway Counseling Services. The
counseling would be provided free of charge unless the  students'
families chose other counseling services,  Joyce said. Students would
be retested at the end of  the 10 days and after completing counseling.

Students who refused to take the test, attempted to  tamper with it or
failed to complete counseling would  be removed from activities for 90
school days and  undergo a more intense counseling program, Joyce said.

Students who tested positive for drugs a second time in  their high
school careers would be removed from  activities and have their
parking passes revoked for 90  days. They would have to complete six
to eight weeks of  counseling.

A third positive test would result in a student's being  removed from
activities and having his or her parking  pass revoked permanently.
Joyce said the district could  use an appeal process if a student
completed counseling  and wanted to rejoin activities after a third
offense.

The middle school program would be voluntary. Parents  could request
their students be tested, and counseling  would be encouraged for
students who tested positive.

Joyce presented numbers from a district survey from  2004-2005 that
said 54.7 percent of students thought  that marijuana could easily be
obtained, that 45.6  percent said at least one of their best friends
had  used marijuana in the past 12 months and that 20.7  percent said
one of their friends had used a drug other  than marijuana

Drug testing of students has been a hot topic in the  past school
year. The Fort Zumwalt District began  randomly testing athletes
through a voluntary program  this school year. That program renewed
one the district  had ended a few years earlier in a period of budget
cuts, but the new program added tests for  performance-enhancing drugs
such as steroids.

Christian Brothers College high school in Town and  Country made
headlines when administrators proposed  testing all students' hair
follicles for drugs.  Marquette Catholic High School in Alton will
begin  mandatory drug testing of students in the 2007-08  school year.

Marquette's policy is to test all students at the  beginning of each
school year and to test about a  quarter of them randomly throughout
the year. Test  results will be confidential. Students who test
positive will have an opportunity to clean up, but they  will be asked
to leave if they cannot.

The Francis Howell board approved meeting dates of June  6, 7 and 8 to
discuss the proposal with parents,  tentatively at 7 p.m. One meeting
will be held at each  of the three high schools. The board did not set
which  building would host a meeting on which night.
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MAP posted-by: Derek