Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US NC: Wayne Boards Discuss The Problem Of Drugs In Local
Title:US NC: Wayne Boards Discuss The Problem Of Drugs In Local
Published On:2008-02-20
Source:Goldsboro News-Argus (NC)
Fetched On:2008-02-21 11:24:50
WAYNE BOARDS DISCUSS THE PROBLEM OF DRUGS IN LOCAL SCHOOLS

Though most of Monday's meeting between the Wayne County Board of
Commissioners and Board of Education was cordial, there was one point
of almost heated contention -- the issue of drugs in schools.

More specifically, the debate was sparked by a question asked by
Commissioner Jack Best about how much free rein the county Sheriff's
Office and its drug dogs have in the county schools.

His concern, he explained, are the rumors that students know when the
dogs are coming and that they can't come unannounced.

"I think the school board has not done enough to get the drugs off
campus. I am very concerned about drugs on our campuses," he said.
"People will respect what you inspect."

School officials emphatically told Best, though, that his information
was wrong.

"The board takes it very seriously," county school Superintendent Dr.
Steve Taylor said.

And while, Sprunt Hill, assistant superintendent of auxiliary
services, acknowledged that there hadn't always been the best
cooperation between all the parties involved in the past, he
emphasized that was changing.

"The board directed us to let the sheriff's department go in and do
what they had to do and then we'd do what we had to do," Hill said.

The only time recently, he added, that the sheriff's office has been
deterred from going into the schools was during end-of-grade testing
because it would have disrupted the entire process and there was no
concrete reason given for the search.

Beyond that, he said, the district has not stood in law enforcement's
way.

"We have never not allowed them to come," Hill said.

Nor, he continued, do officials give the principals any advance
warning -- only a phone call about 10 minutes before sheriff's
deputies arrive.

In fact, Hill said, only members of the school system's safety and
security team know the night before, and he doesn't even know about
searches until the mornings of the events.

"Nobody knows unless it's the sheriff's office and those dogs because
we don't tell," he said.

Besides, he added, "the drug dogs have never found any drugs in any
lockers."

The dogs are only allowed to search lockers and cars -- not
people.

In fact, he said, every recent drug bust the school system has had has
been made by teachers and other administrators, often based on student
tips.

So, Hill noted, the district is not just relying on the sheriff's
office to eradicate drugs in schools. Officials are also working
themselves to implement drug awareness and other drug-free campus programs.

"We're doing a lot of things," he said.

The most important thing, though, Taylor added, is "(getting) parents
involved -- checking those book bags, checking those pockets and
seeing what (their children are) doing."

But the rest, school officials said in response to Best's question of
what the commissioners can do to help, is up to the county -- to fund
the school resource officers for the middle schools and to fund
countywide efforts to fight drugs on the streets.

"If you can get drugs out of the county, we'll get them out of the
schools," school board member John Grantham said.
Member Comments
No member comments available...