Pubdate: Sun, 13 May 2007
Source: Mississippi Press, The (MS)
Copyright: 2007 Mississippi Press
Contact:  http://www.gulflive.com/mississippipress/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2254

OCEAN SPRINGS SCHOOL DRUG POLICY SHOULDN'T CHANGE

Ocean Springs School Board members ought to reject  changing the
district's zero-tolerance policy toward  drug possession on school
property.

A degree of leniency is being sought for students  caught for the
first time with drugs. The current  policy calls for students
violating the drug policy to  be sent to an alternative school for one
year. Students  sent to the alternative school for drug possession can
  request an early return to regular classes, but must  spend at least
85 percent of the school year in the  alternative school.

While flexibility is a valuable tool in discipline, the  school
district should not bend when it comes to drug  possession. The
explanation may be that this leniency  is only for first-time
offenders, but the message sent  is the wrong one. Drug possession on
campus should not  be dismissed lightly, and that's what the policy
change  suggests is under way here.

Superintendent Robert Hirsch said he surveyed other  districts and
found alternative school terms for  first-time drug offenders are as
short as 45 days.  Hirsch said his administrators are telling him they
  need a policy with more flexibility.

However, John Brenke, a board member, asked Hirsch if  the more
lenient policies lessened the violations or  created more violations.
That's a great question.

The discussion brings up the entire scope of discipline  in schools.
Teachers face a constant challenge to  maintain discipline. Drug
possession and use on campus  promises to make maintaining order in
the classroom  more difficult. Relaxing the drug policy would
undermine teachers and that should be avoided.

Besides discipline issues, drug possession poses a  heavy risk that
drug use will proliferate on campus.  The board and administrators are
inviting trouble if  they relax the rules.

Drug possession, like firearms on campus, is a serious  matter and
should not be treated lightly. If students  are drug users, they
should know they will face a heavy  penalty for bringing drugs onto
campus. Alternative  school may be tough, but it is better than jail,
which  may eventually happen to them in the real world.  Society has
set boundaries for this kind of behavior  and school is one place
where students should learn the  limits.

Students caught with drugs on campus should welcome a  sentence to the
alternative school rather than a trip  before a prosecutor and judge.

As the anti-drug slogan of the 1980's stated, the board  should "Just
Say No" to this proposal.
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MAP posted-by: Derek