Pubdate: Wed, 14 May 2008
Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU)
Copyright: 2008 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc.
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274
Author: David Johnston
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs)

DOG BACK ON DRUG PATROL AT SCHOOL

Top Court Suspended Duties In April. Students, Teachers, Parents, 
Administrators Had All Approved Sniffer-Style Initiative

After two weeks of unemployment, a German shepherd named Tim is back 
on the job this week, ready for work inside the largest high school 
in the Laurentians to sniff for drugs.

Tim began his work at the comprehensive high school in St. Jerome on 
April 11. On April 25, his duties were suspended after a Supreme 
Court of Canada judgment imposed new restrictions on the use of 
sniffer dogs by police.

After a close reading of the high-court judgment, the school board in 
charge of l'Ecole Polyvalente St. Jerome has decided to reintroduce 
Tim and some of his fellow German shepherds.

Remy Tremblay, secretary-general of the Commission scolaire de la 
Riviere du Nord, said the Supreme Court ruling applied specifically 
to police dogs, not dogs like Tim who work at arm's length from 
law-enforcement agencies.

As a result, the board contends that use of non-police sniffer dogs 
is legal in schools under a 1998 Supreme Court judgment that 
broadened the authority of school boards to take measures to curtail 
drug use in their schools. That judgment condoned a principal's 
search of a student in Nova Scotia.

"A key element here is that we aren't using use sniffer dogs to 
arrest students or put students behind bars," Tremblay explained.

"We are using them simply to identify kids at risk and to notify parents."

Tim is one of dogs that the board wants to keep on retainer, Tremblay 
said. They are owned by trainers who started their own consulting 
company after retiring from the Surete du Quebec, he said.

The dogs have been trained to sit down beside students who carry the 
scent of drugs, or sit down beside school bags or lockers that smell 
of illegal substances like marijuana or cocaine.

On his first tour of duty in the St. Jerome high school on April 11, 
Tim sniffed out one student who was carrying drugs, while locker 
smell tests resulted in another two students being called out of a 
Grade 8 math test. There were other findings that Tremblay said he 
didn't want to discuss.

Self-reporting drug-use questionnaires administered by the government 
of Quebec have found one-third of Quebec students have tried 
marijuana by Grade 9, compared with the Canadian average of 18 per cent.

High schools in suburbs north of Montreal accounted for a high 
proportion of police drug raids in 2005, according to an analysis of 
police records last year by the Journal de Montreal.

Schools in Terrebonne and Mascouche had the most police action, said 
the Journal study, which involved 83 access-to-information requests 
from 163 high schools in 41 Montreal-area municipalities, including 
the city of Montreal. No English schools were in the top 25 list.

Tremblay said the sniffer-dog initiative in St. Jerome was approved 
by teachers, parents, the school administration and students before 
it was introduced last month.

Tim and his canine colleagues will be called on for an unspecified 
number of visits to the St. Jerome high school before the end of the 
school year, Tremblay said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom