News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Editorial: Stop Playing Chicken With Drug Test Funding |
Title: | US HI: Editorial: Stop Playing Chicken With Drug Test Funding |
Published On: | 2008-01-27 |
Source: | Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-28 15:23:22 |
STOP PLAYING CHICKEN WITH DRUG TEST FUNDING
THE ISSUE The Board of Education has rejected a $400,000 allocation
to pay for drug testing of teachers.
A new round in an escalating battle over money for drug testing
public school teachers pits the Board of Education against Gov. Linda
Lingle with the current teachers contract possibly at stake.
In December, the governor got into it with the Department of
Education, refusing its budget request for more than $500,000 to pay
for testing. Last week, the BOE took a turn, voting down a motion to
set aside $400,000. Board members argued that if the governor wants
the drug tests that she insisted be a non-negotiable part of the
contract, she should not have rejected the funding request.
Hovering in the background is a potential suit by the American Civil
Liberties Union of Hawaii if random testing moves forward. The ACLU,
which has the backing of more than 200 teachers, says random testing
violates the law; it has no objection to tests when there is
reasonable suspicion.
The conflict is as much about power and authority as it is about
money. The governor has long sought to reorganize the department and
the board without success.
Though Lingle contends the department has enough in its $2 billion
budget for testing, she should be willing to pay for a program she
required.
Not implementing the tests would likely invalidate the contract,
nullifying raises teachers have been receiving since July. The
situation should not be allowed to deteriorate further. Voiding the
contract would result in a mess of problems, and neither the
governor nor school authorities should be playing a game of chicken
with public education as the wager.
THE ISSUE The Board of Education has rejected a $400,000 allocation
to pay for drug testing of teachers.
A new round in an escalating battle over money for drug testing
public school teachers pits the Board of Education against Gov. Linda
Lingle with the current teachers contract possibly at stake.
In December, the governor got into it with the Department of
Education, refusing its budget request for more than $500,000 to pay
for testing. Last week, the BOE took a turn, voting down a motion to
set aside $400,000. Board members argued that if the governor wants
the drug tests that she insisted be a non-negotiable part of the
contract, she should not have rejected the funding request.
Hovering in the background is a potential suit by the American Civil
Liberties Union of Hawaii if random testing moves forward. The ACLU,
which has the backing of more than 200 teachers, says random testing
violates the law; it has no objection to tests when there is
reasonable suspicion.
The conflict is as much about power and authority as it is about
money. The governor has long sought to reorganize the department and
the board without success.
Though Lingle contends the department has enough in its $2 billion
budget for testing, she should be willing to pay for a program she
required.
Not implementing the tests would likely invalidate the contract,
nullifying raises teachers have been receiving since July. The
situation should not be allowed to deteriorate further. Voiding the
contract would result in a mess of problems, and neither the
governor nor school authorities should be playing a game of chicken
with public education as the wager.
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