Pubdate: Wed, 21 Apr 2010
Source: Times, The (Gainesville, GA)
Copyright: 2010 Gainesville Times
Contact:  http://www.gainesvilletimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2701
Author: Stephen Gurr

HALL COUNTY DRUG-SCREEN LAB AIMS TO KEEP THEIR PARTICIPANTS HONEST

Every morning, people line up to give drug-screen samples inside a
nondescript building a block from the sheriff's office on Main Street.

At the offices of Hall County Treatment Services, as many as 500
samples are tested at the department's in-house lab each week.

Hall County is one of only 15 counties in Georgia with its own
drug-screening lab, an operation that saves money, increases
efficiency and holds drug and DUI court participants more accountable,
officials say.

"We've caught a lot more folks trying to dilute their specimens," said
Debbie Mott, treatment services director. "It has definitely brought
about a behavioral change in our participants."

Hall County's accountability courts, started in 2001, involve
long-term court supervision of offenders combined with substance abuse
treatment and frequent drug and alcohol screens.

For the first five years the courts were in operation, treatment
service employees used "Instacups;" drug-testing kits that cost $3.25
per test. The process could give false positives, and confirmations
required mailing them to a California-based toxicology lab.

The process was neither cost-effective or time-efficient.

Judges expressed "gut feelings" that some participants were "getting
away with" drug use, Mott said.

In August 2006, Hall County became one of seven pilot counties or
judicial circuits to open its own drug-testing lab through a statewide
contract with Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics.

Two lab technicians are contract employees, and the massive chemistry
analyzer they use is included in the cost of the tests, roughly 70
cents for every substance tested.

Mott said on Monday and Tuesday of this week, typical days at the lab,
284 specimens were tested for alcohol, cocaine, marijuana and other
drugs, with 29 yielding positive results. Those tests, under the old
system, would have cost $4,315, Mott said. With the in-house lab, they
cost $1,391, she said.

The bulk of the costs are covered by the participants, who pay a
monthly fee to be in drug court, Mott said. Some grant money is also
used, making the lab largely self-sufficient, she said.

The lab also runs tests as ordered by judges in cases outside the
accountability courts, and has an agreement to do testing for the
local office of the Division of Family and Children Services.

Inside the waiting area and the lab itself, collections run like
clockwork, seven days a week. Court participants are required to call
a phone number to learn whether they've been selected for a random
test. They report either early in the morning or late in the
afternoon, where they fill out a form, get a small, plastic sample jar
and are escorted to a bathroom.

"Every collection is observed, and I can't stress how important that
is," Mott said.

If a participant admits in writing that he or she has used a
prohibited substance prior to the test, that admission will be given
consideration by the court, Mott said.

"Positive results with admissions get treated differently than
positives with denials," she said.

Positive samples are stored for up to three months, meaning several
refrigerators are filled with specimens at any given time.

Lack of sufficient space is the biggest factor preventing more
counties from operating their own drug screening labs, Mott said.

"A lot of drug courts throughout the state just don't have this kind
of space," Mott said. "We're fortunate, through the support of the
judges and commissioners, to have this." 
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