Pubdate: Fri, 19 May 2000 Date: 05/19/2000 Source: Arlington Morning News (TX) Author: Myron Von Hollingsworth Re: "There are better ways to judge leadership," Letters From Readers (May 11): From the very first "drug test" to the present, the very nature of the methods used for "screening" reduce these "tests" to nothing more than "lifestyle testing." Furthermore, only certain lifestyles result in a "failure" of these tests. It's not about public safety or employee safety, and it is not about identifying true real-time impairment of employees - it's about fear, control and oppression. My former employer blatantly practiced "random enforcement of their random lifestyle testing policy" depending on who you were and how important you were to the company. I quit my management position after 10 years for that reason alone. Moreover, the most popular methods of testing (urine, blood and hair) do not measure true, "real time" impairment. They only measure non-psychoactive metabolites that can be present days or weeks after the effects of substances have subsided. ("Soft" drugs remain "visible" longer than "hard" drugs-prompting people to use the more damaging, addictive and deadly substances - like alcohol - to avoid detection.) What we have is a flawed system whereby a majority of impaired people aren't detected until after they have hurt or killed someone else or themselves. Meanwhile, those who would have other individuals submit to the tests claim "it may not be a fair or effective test but it is all we have." This excuse/dilemma will no longer hold water. Saliva testing will prove to be cheaper (probably a great deal cheaper as currently used methods can average $60 and up per test). Those truly interested in the "bottom line" will have the chance to prove it. Saliva testing will be simpler (it can be performed by almost anyone with chain of custody problems being next to nil). Saliva testing will be much less time consuming (it can be administered onsite-before and even after a shift-instead of having to drive people to the "clinic"). Most importantly, saliva testing will measure and indicate, without a doubt, what employers, insurers and others in "authority" say they fervently require and want: true, current, real time, up to the minute impairment of individuals. The media need to keep this story in the news and publicize the efficacy and popularity of this new technology as it develops in order to expose those who are justifiably concerned for the safety and well-being of individuals and societies. Then, those who use current methods merely as instruments of intimidation, punishment, control, fear and terror against one's lifestyle will be exposed for what they are and what they have chosen. Whereas we must choose between living in a free society or a drug-free society - it will be obvious that they have chosen the latter while betraying and forsaking the former. Myron Von Hollingsworth, Fort Worth