Pubdate: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2011 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: John Dalton Note: John Dalton and his daughter Brittany, an Enterprise High School graduate, were plaintiffs in the ACLU lawsuit against the Shasta Union High School District's drug-testing policy. DISTRICT STILL WON'T ADMIT IT WAS WRONG The Shasta Union High School District refuses to admit that it was wrong to require that students who participate in a number of school activities take a drug test. The district has now dropped its policy of random, suspicionless drug testing for students in competitive activities like marching band, math club, and mock trial, after three years of litigation with the American Civil Liberties Union. But if the district can't see the error of its ways, how we can be sure it has learned a lesson about following the law? This is personal for my family. My daughter Brittany refused to submit to a drug test. We both felt that forcing her to urinate in a cup while a stranger listens from the other side of the stall is a complete violation of her privacy. We offered to have her tested privately at an off-site facility. The district wouldn't accept that. Brittany was a dedicated musician throughout high school, but because she wouldn't take the drug test at school, the district tried to stop her from playing with her flute ensemble at a prestigious statewide competition. Just days before the competition, a judge ruled that the district's policy was wrong, in large part because there was absolutely no evidence to support the district's claims that suspicionless drug testing does anything to reduce student drug use. Brittany was allowed to play in the competition and the ensemble won the gold medal. That wasn't good enough for the district, and it appealed that ruling. A second judge, who is now the chief justice of the California Supreme Court, also said the district's policy broke the law. That seems like a pretty trustworthy opinion. The two other appeals court judges who heard the case agreed. Throughout the lawsuit, the district was not even able to convince a single judge in two courts that the policy would be effective at preventing drug use. I'm a parent, so I understand concerns about drug use, and making sure that our kids are safe and healthy. I also believe it's important, for schools especially, to set an example about ways to solve complex problems. What kind of example does it set when a school district breaks the law, and then won't admit that it has done wrong? What's more, shouldn't school district resources - our taxpayer dollars - be spent addressing drug use with things that work? It's time the school district admit that, although intentions may have been in the right place, it was wrong to make students like my daughter take a drug test just so they could play in the marching band. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart