Pubdate: Sun, 28 Feb 2010
Source: Great Falls Tribune (MT)
Copyright: 2010 Great Falls Tribune
Contact: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/customerservice/contactus.html
Website: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2502
Author: Kristen Cates
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

SCHOOLS HOPE DRUG TESTING WILL CURB USE

The Fort Benton School District is one of the latest  schools
statewide looking to update its policy on drugs  and alcohol use by
students participating in  extracurricular activities.

Most high schools around the state have policies  issuing some sort of
punishment for students involved  in athletics or extracurricular
activities who choose  to consume alcohol or drugs, or use tobacco.
The degree  of punishment depends on the district.

Joe Brott, director of policy services for the Montana  School Boards
Association, said he has been approached  in recent years by districts
looking to tighten their  policies -- and in some cases institute
mandatory drug  testing -- because they are experiencing an increase
in  use of drugs and alcohol among students.

"I don't know how many districts are going forward with  it," Brott
said.

Fort Benton Superintendent Scott Chauvet said his  district isn't
looking at drug testing, but rather  wants to add language to its
policy to include a lesser  punishment for students who self-report
illegal  behavior.

"Kids didn't have the option to come in and self-report  the problem,"
he said.

A first violation of the policy currently results in a  suspension for
the rest of the season and enrollment in  a 10-hour substance abuse
course, regardless of whether  students turn themselves in. The
district would like to  change the language for students who
self-report  violations to a suspension of three event weeks of
extra-curricular activities and enrollment in substance  abuse training.

Chauvet said the issue has long been looked at by Fort  Benton school
trustees, but the trustees were propelled  into action when
allegations surfaced over Christmas  break that a number of student
athletes had been  drinking.

"These issues in these little towns blow up," Chauvet
said.

He said that in the Christmas break case, his hands  were somewhat
tied because no citations for minors in  possession of alcohol were
issued, so he had to depend  on students to turn themselves in as a
way to resolve  the issue. Some did; some didn't.

"I'd rather get something rather than nothing at all,"  he said. "I
don't think we have an epidemic type of  thing. Times change and you
have to be able to change  with them."

In Glasgow this fall, trustees approved requiring all  students
participating in extracurricular activities --  everything from
football to speech and debate -- to  take scheduled drug tests and
submit to random drug  tests.

The district has studied the issue for the past three  years. At the
same time it became aware through  anonymous surveys and information
from law enforcement  of an increase in drug and alcohol use by students.

"I'm not naive enough to think we'll never have a drug  problem,"
Superintendent Glenn Hageman said.

The plan is to start testing students in activities  this spring and
institute random drug testing in the  fall. Trustees in the district
approved a lengthy  policy that details the specifics of conducting
the  testing.

Willie Thibault, vice principal and activities director  for Glasgow
High School, said surveys were handed out  to parents at fall
parent-athlete meetings. Results  showed 90 percent of parents who
responded were in  favor of allowing drug testing on their student
athletes.

"The idea is that it is a deterrent -- not to catch  anybody,"
Thibault said. "We want to help reinforce our  students into making
good choices."

Scott King, activities director for the Malta School  District, said
his school and Plentywood are the only  two schools in their
six-school conference not to do  drug testing.

King said that after meeting with parents this fall and  the school
board, addressing the drug and alcohol  policy became the top priority
of many changes the  community wants to see to help prevent the use of
drugs  and alcohol by students..

"I think our parents are looking for additional help,  with the
schools providing assistance," he said. "We  have gotten very good
parental support."

King said the hope is to have a new drug and alcohol  policy in place
for Malta High School this fall.

Brott said it's not a state requirement that school  districts have a
drug and alcohol policy, but most do.  He said the Montana School
Boards Association assists  districts that are looking to change or
modify their  policies by providing them with model language. The
level of discipline is up to individual school  districts.

In Glasgow, the policy calls for a two-week suspension  of a student
who tests positive on the drug screening.

In Fort Benton, students who don't self-report a  violation but and
are instead caught with drugs and  alcohol could be suspended for the
rest of the sports  season.

"More and more school districts are starting to get  involved in (drug
testing) because more and more  students are abusing alcohol and
drugs," Brott said.

But instituting such heavy-handed policies requires a  lot of input,
he said.

"If districts go about it in the right fashion, we  don't see a real
fight against it," he said. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D