Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Pubdate: Tue, 31 Mar 1998 SCHOOL DRUG POLICIES Re: "Much ado about Alka-Seltzer," Diana Griego Erwin, March 12: Since the senior administration of the San Juan Unified School District, except for Superintendent Ray Tolleson himself, is not especially known for its humility, it should come as no surprise that Lee Negri, director of middle schools, would rather make a complete fool of himself publicly rather than admit to the possibility that he is wrong. Alka-Seltzer is an over-the-counter pharmaceutical with a high margin of safety. It is not a street drug. While I am certain that most parents fully support the district's zero-tolerance policy with respect to alcohol, illegal street drugs and weapons, the extension of this policy as a basis for a student's two-day suspension thoroughly undermines the effectiveness of the policy. - --Scott J. Rose, Fair Oaks As usual, Erwin just does not seem to get it. She contends that a zero-tolerance drug rule should not apply to honor students. This student was suspended for two days for picking up a dirty white tablet (purportedly Alka-Seltzer) and giving this contaminated tablet to two buddies, who ingested it. This white tablet could just as easily have been something else. Erwin's slant on this reminds me of the small rural town in which I grew up. Latino kids were routinely jailed for violating pot laws. They were also expelled from school. However, when the principal's son and the sons of several prominent people were caught smoking pot, all of a sudden there was a "drug problem." PTA meetings were held. The principal's wife chaired many of the meetings. What Erwin is saying is that it does not matter what the infraction is. It matters who did it. Her prejudice is showing (again). - --Carlos Zaragoza, Sacramento "A big zero -- how intolerant we've become," Forum, March 22: That was a prime example of just how screwed up this country has become. Suspension for gifts? Beepers? Cough drops? You have the entire adult world telling kids, you have a headache, take an Advil. Cramps? Midol will help. Parents go out to purchase these items, give them to their children to help them feel better, to look better, to get healthier to go to school. And along comes some idiot school administrator with no common sense who contradicts everything that the parents have reinforced. Did President Clinton's support for "zero tolerance" really mean to punish a 5-year-old for carrying a beeper or an 11-year-old for bringing a chili pepper to school? Just what do you think would happen if these same administrators attempted to impose these very same zero tolerance standards to the faculty members of these schools? - --John V. Shepherd Sr., Elverta Today, we have zero tolerance for drugs, alcohol, weapons and gangs in school, and zero tolerance for sexual harassment and racial discrimination in society. Fine, but who oversees and administers these activities? None other than law enforcement, government and those groups closely associated with them. Zero tolerance is a popular means to stop repugnant and criminal activities, but what happens when this same safety net is the cause of new and more repugnant activities? - --Ron Lowe, Nevada City Getting Tough on Drinking, Driving Re "0.10 vs. 0.08," editorial, March 7: Do we really think lowering the limit 0.02 points makes a difference? What we are forgetting is that the blood-alcohol level of people who are driving is entirely unknown until they are tested. This is unlike the speed limit, where the police can shine a radar gun at your car and quickly determine whether or not you are violating the law. With drinking and driving, if they can tell you are drunk -- by swerving or whatever -- you are probably way over the limit anyway. The reason deaths are down today is that society has gotten conscious of these dangers. Bartenders are calling cabs for people, groups are assigning designated drivers and society is less tolerant. As such, deaths are being reduced by action, not by legal technicalities. What we really need to do if we are so scared of drunken drivers is to drop the limit to zero. Let all drivers know that a sip of beer is too much. - --Rich Wolf, Sacramento Drug War Casualties The Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement provided 102 pounds of ephedrine to dealers. Of the 66 pounds of pure crank produced by the chemicals, almost 58 pounds was never recovered. Could this be a typical occurrence? We are reminded by federal prosecutor Nancy Simpson, "The agents followed the law and the bureau's written protocol and acted for the greater good of society." Prohibition creates fiscal incentive for drug dealers. Hard drugs continue to destroy lives. And fighting their presence is a government industry supported by tax dollars.Anyone sincerely interested in alleviating the drug problem recognizes that education and economics are the keys. - --Scott S. Johnson, Dobbins