News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: Green Valley High Staff Lauds Benefits Of Drug-Testing |
Title: | US NV: Green Valley High Staff Lauds Benefits Of Drug-Testing |
Published On: | 2008-12-23 |
Source: | Las Vegas Sun (NV) |
Fetched On: | 2008-12-26 17:36:03 |
GREEN VALLEY HIGH STAFF LAUDS BENEFITS OF DRUG-TESTING PROGRAM
The random drug-testing program at Green Valley High has seen a drop
in the number of students found with drugs in their system in the
year since its inception last winter.
With 165 students tested since the beginning of the school year,
administrators credit the program for a 50 percent drop in positive tests.
The first public school in the state to launch the
individually-funded program, the school has tested roughly 15
students per week and has reported four positive tests this school
year - none from athletes.
Last year, in the spring semester, the school reported eight positive
tests, six from athletes.
Green Valley also tests students in orchestra, choir, band and
performing arts. Green Valley Principal Jeff Horn said reactions from
parents, teachers and coaches have been favorable and feels the low
number of positive tests shows the value of the program. He'd
eventually like to test all students.
"I'd like to have zero positives but I'm a realist and I know how
prevalent drugs are in our society in all age groups," Horn said.
Green Valley senior football player Nick Libonati said he has been
tested three times and sees the program as a good influence.
"I like that we're holding ourselves to a higher standard and staying
clean," Libonati said. "I think it's better for us and it reflects
well on the school that we've had so few positive tests."
Since launching the program last January, Green Valley has been
joined by Coronado and Silverado which have begun similar programs.
While Green Valley funds its program through private donations and
application fees included in students' annual athletic packets,
Silverado and Coronado operate solely from athletic packet revenue.
They conduct fewer tests per month and limit their random selections
to athletes.
Silverado has conducted 64 tests with three positives while Coronado
reported about 70 tests with two students testing positive.
Students who test positive are given a six-week athletic suspension,
per Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association guidelines. The
suspension can be reduced to two weeks with the completion of a
substance abuse program.
"I think the program is going well and accomplishing what we set out
to do," Coronado Assistant Principal Sam Johnson said. "Things have
been running smoothly. The only real problem has been funding."
Ray Mathis, the Clark County School District's executive director of
instructional support and student activities, said while the results
from the three schools are promising, a move to a district-wide
program is unlikely.
"As far as I know, nothing has been discussed beyond the current
situation of allowing each school to decide for themselves," Mathis
said. "The main concern is funding. I don't know that the district
could support that kind of program district-wide especially with the
budgetary concerns we're already facing."
Johnson estimates the cost per year between $2,500 and $3,000 or
about $30 per test.
"We felt a program like this was what's best for our school and our
students, but if three schools are doing it I think they all should,"
Silverado Assistant Principal Jerry Cornell said. "It should be all
or nothing. Right now our students are being held to a higher standard."
Allen Lichtenstein, general counsel for the American Civil Liberties
Union of Southern Nevada, said the organization has received several
calls from concerned parents who feel the testing is an invasion of privacy.
"We believe there is nothing quite as useless as random drug-testing
for football players when there's not enough money for teachers and
books," Lichtenstein said. "It's a feel-good program that violates
basic privacy rights. This was our position last year and it
continues to be our position."
The random drug-testing program at Green Valley High has seen a drop
in the number of students found with drugs in their system in the
year since its inception last winter.
With 165 students tested since the beginning of the school year,
administrators credit the program for a 50 percent drop in positive tests.
The first public school in the state to launch the
individually-funded program, the school has tested roughly 15
students per week and has reported four positive tests this school
year - none from athletes.
Last year, in the spring semester, the school reported eight positive
tests, six from athletes.
Green Valley also tests students in orchestra, choir, band and
performing arts. Green Valley Principal Jeff Horn said reactions from
parents, teachers and coaches have been favorable and feels the low
number of positive tests shows the value of the program. He'd
eventually like to test all students.
"I'd like to have zero positives but I'm a realist and I know how
prevalent drugs are in our society in all age groups," Horn said.
Green Valley senior football player Nick Libonati said he has been
tested three times and sees the program as a good influence.
"I like that we're holding ourselves to a higher standard and staying
clean," Libonati said. "I think it's better for us and it reflects
well on the school that we've had so few positive tests."
Since launching the program last January, Green Valley has been
joined by Coronado and Silverado which have begun similar programs.
While Green Valley funds its program through private donations and
application fees included in students' annual athletic packets,
Silverado and Coronado operate solely from athletic packet revenue.
They conduct fewer tests per month and limit their random selections
to athletes.
Silverado has conducted 64 tests with three positives while Coronado
reported about 70 tests with two students testing positive.
Students who test positive are given a six-week athletic suspension,
per Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association guidelines. The
suspension can be reduced to two weeks with the completion of a
substance abuse program.
"I think the program is going well and accomplishing what we set out
to do," Coronado Assistant Principal Sam Johnson said. "Things have
been running smoothly. The only real problem has been funding."
Ray Mathis, the Clark County School District's executive director of
instructional support and student activities, said while the results
from the three schools are promising, a move to a district-wide
program is unlikely.
"As far as I know, nothing has been discussed beyond the current
situation of allowing each school to decide for themselves," Mathis
said. "The main concern is funding. I don't know that the district
could support that kind of program district-wide especially with the
budgetary concerns we're already facing."
Johnson estimates the cost per year between $2,500 and $3,000 or
about $30 per test.
"We felt a program like this was what's best for our school and our
students, but if three schools are doing it I think they all should,"
Silverado Assistant Principal Jerry Cornell said. "It should be all
or nothing. Right now our students are being held to a higher standard."
Allen Lichtenstein, general counsel for the American Civil Liberties
Union of Southern Nevada, said the organization has received several
calls from concerned parents who feel the testing is an invasion of privacy.
"We believe there is nothing quite as useless as random drug-testing
for football players when there's not enough money for teachers and
books," Lichtenstein said. "It's a feel-good program that violates
basic privacy rights. This was our position last year and it
continues to be our position."
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