News (Media Awareness Project) - CN MB: Schools Hire Dog To Sniff Out Drugs |
Title: | CN MB: Schools Hire Dog To Sniff Out Drugs |
Published On: | 2004-11-29 |
Source: | Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 08:31:42 |
SCHOOLS HIRE DOG TO SNIFF OUT DRUGS
Concerns Raised About Legality Of Searches
THREE rural Manitoba schools have hired a drug-detection dog to sniff out
everything from marijuana to crystal methamphetamine -- despite a warning
such searches could be illegal.
It's the first time in Manitoba a drug dog owned by a private company, not
police, has been hired by school officials to sniff students' lockers. A
fourth Manitoba school is expected to be searched by the dog before Christmas.
The searches come as high schools across Canada try to deal with increased
drug use by students.
But the choice of a private dog-for-hire detection team raises concerns
about the legal rights of students because no police are involved.
"I am surprised this has taken place," Keith Thomas, risk manager for the
Manitoba Association of School Trustees, said in an interview.
"It does beg the question whether the schools are handling this right if
they do this without police. This is a criminal event." The searches have
been done by Rogue Crew Investigations under a private contract with each
school. The firm is run by Jeff Bellingham, a retired city police drug
investigator and his wife, Scarlett.
Bellingham said his dog has also been used at several Manitoba businesses
whose managers fear drug use on the job could affect productivity and
worker safety. In these searches, the dog has found marijuana, ecstasy,
cocaine and crystal methamphetamine.
He also said several parents have hired the dog to search their homes to
learn if their kids are using drugs.
Bellingham would not name the schools that have contracted him, citing
confidentiality.
He said the searches were done at random and as unobtrusively as possible.
One search of lockers was done during school hours, although no students
were present, he said. "The school wanted to let the kids know what was
happening," Bellingham said. "The message was that if you want to bring
your drugs to school, this is the risk you take."
He said drugs found by his dog were given to police for destruction. School
officials and the students' parents punished the students.
MAST's Thomas has said in the past that schools should not use
drug-detection dogs to root out narcotics.
"The best advice we've given principals, if you have strong suspicions
about someone, you have the right to call in the Mounties or the city
police," Thomas said. "I warn them, these are very treacherous waters.
"You don't do it on a whim. The parents need to be part and parcel of this,
or you're going to be in trouble."
But Bellingham said schools have a duty to be proactive in clamping down on
drugs.
A major study last week suggested marijuana use in Canada has doubled over
the last decade. The Canadian Addiction Survey reports that 14 per cent of
respondents, many of them young Canadians, say they used cannabis in the
last year, up from 7.4 per cent in 1994.
"This is something trustees couldn't grasp," he said. "Schools have an
obligation to provide a healthy, safe environment. I am not acting as an
agent of the state. I am only doing what the school has asked me to do.
Principals, teachers and students are in favour of this."
He cited an Addictions Foundation of Manitoba 2001 survey that said more
than half the students questioned viewed alcohol and drug use as a major
problem at their school, with only academic failure seen as a comparable
threat. The issue of using drug-sniffing dogs for schools is not unique to
Manitoba. A school board in B.C.'s Fraser Valley was to approve a
controversial draft drug policy this week to bring drug-sniffing dogs into
schools, despite criticism by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association.
"We're trying to be as respectful and sensitive of people's privacy as
possible," Abbotsford trustee and policy committee chairman Don Szostak
said, "but on the other hand, if there are drugs in a locker, we want to
deal with it."
B.C. Civil Liberties Association executive director Murray Molland has
raised concerns about the impact on students if dogs give a false positive
alert when sniffing a locker.
"The school board is embarking on a disastrous path that will certainly
lead to false accusations and wrongly stigmatize students as drug users,"
Molland said in a statement.
Schools in Alberta and Ontario have also used detector dogs to find drugs.
In Manitoba, a plan last year to allow random drug testing of student
athletes was shelved by Garden Valley School Division trustees because of
widespread criticism.
"They concluded that the rights of the individual, at this point,
superseded the rights of the group," Garden Valley superintendent Dom
Wilkins said at the time.
Wilkins said yesterday the division hasn't revisited the testing plan or
brought in a drug-sniffing dog.
He said schools rely on internal counselling programs to help students with
drug abuse. If drugs are found, police are called. Hanover School Division
superintendent John Peters said the use of a dog could create a bad image
for a school.
"Kids are more sophisticated now," Peters added. "They're too smart to
bring drugs into a building. They keep them in their cars."
Interlake School Division superintendent Darlene Dufily said she was
unaware of any the division's schools being visited by a drug dog.
Bellingham started his private investigation firm more than a year ago
after he retired from Winnipeg police.
His dog Billy, a Belgian Malinois, is trained to American Drug Enforcement
Agency standards.
Concerns Raised About Legality Of Searches
THREE rural Manitoba schools have hired a drug-detection dog to sniff out
everything from marijuana to crystal methamphetamine -- despite a warning
such searches could be illegal.
It's the first time in Manitoba a drug dog owned by a private company, not
police, has been hired by school officials to sniff students' lockers. A
fourth Manitoba school is expected to be searched by the dog before Christmas.
The searches come as high schools across Canada try to deal with increased
drug use by students.
But the choice of a private dog-for-hire detection team raises concerns
about the legal rights of students because no police are involved.
"I am surprised this has taken place," Keith Thomas, risk manager for the
Manitoba Association of School Trustees, said in an interview.
"It does beg the question whether the schools are handling this right if
they do this without police. This is a criminal event." The searches have
been done by Rogue Crew Investigations under a private contract with each
school. The firm is run by Jeff Bellingham, a retired city police drug
investigator and his wife, Scarlett.
Bellingham said his dog has also been used at several Manitoba businesses
whose managers fear drug use on the job could affect productivity and
worker safety. In these searches, the dog has found marijuana, ecstasy,
cocaine and crystal methamphetamine.
He also said several parents have hired the dog to search their homes to
learn if their kids are using drugs.
Bellingham would not name the schools that have contracted him, citing
confidentiality.
He said the searches were done at random and as unobtrusively as possible.
One search of lockers was done during school hours, although no students
were present, he said. "The school wanted to let the kids know what was
happening," Bellingham said. "The message was that if you want to bring
your drugs to school, this is the risk you take."
He said drugs found by his dog were given to police for destruction. School
officials and the students' parents punished the students.
MAST's Thomas has said in the past that schools should not use
drug-detection dogs to root out narcotics.
"The best advice we've given principals, if you have strong suspicions
about someone, you have the right to call in the Mounties or the city
police," Thomas said. "I warn them, these are very treacherous waters.
"You don't do it on a whim. The parents need to be part and parcel of this,
or you're going to be in trouble."
But Bellingham said schools have a duty to be proactive in clamping down on
drugs.
A major study last week suggested marijuana use in Canada has doubled over
the last decade. The Canadian Addiction Survey reports that 14 per cent of
respondents, many of them young Canadians, say they used cannabis in the
last year, up from 7.4 per cent in 1994.
"This is something trustees couldn't grasp," he said. "Schools have an
obligation to provide a healthy, safe environment. I am not acting as an
agent of the state. I am only doing what the school has asked me to do.
Principals, teachers and students are in favour of this."
He cited an Addictions Foundation of Manitoba 2001 survey that said more
than half the students questioned viewed alcohol and drug use as a major
problem at their school, with only academic failure seen as a comparable
threat. The issue of using drug-sniffing dogs for schools is not unique to
Manitoba. A school board in B.C.'s Fraser Valley was to approve a
controversial draft drug policy this week to bring drug-sniffing dogs into
schools, despite criticism by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association.
"We're trying to be as respectful and sensitive of people's privacy as
possible," Abbotsford trustee and policy committee chairman Don Szostak
said, "but on the other hand, if there are drugs in a locker, we want to
deal with it."
B.C. Civil Liberties Association executive director Murray Molland has
raised concerns about the impact on students if dogs give a false positive
alert when sniffing a locker.
"The school board is embarking on a disastrous path that will certainly
lead to false accusations and wrongly stigmatize students as drug users,"
Molland said in a statement.
Schools in Alberta and Ontario have also used detector dogs to find drugs.
In Manitoba, a plan last year to allow random drug testing of student
athletes was shelved by Garden Valley School Division trustees because of
widespread criticism.
"They concluded that the rights of the individual, at this point,
superseded the rights of the group," Garden Valley superintendent Dom
Wilkins said at the time.
Wilkins said yesterday the division hasn't revisited the testing plan or
brought in a drug-sniffing dog.
He said schools rely on internal counselling programs to help students with
drug abuse. If drugs are found, police are called. Hanover School Division
superintendent John Peters said the use of a dog could create a bad image
for a school.
"Kids are more sophisticated now," Peters added. "They're too smart to
bring drugs into a building. They keep them in their cars."
Interlake School Division superintendent Darlene Dufily said she was
unaware of any the division's schools being visited by a drug dog.
Bellingham started his private investigation firm more than a year ago
after he retired from Winnipeg police.
His dog Billy, a Belgian Malinois, is trained to American Drug Enforcement
Agency standards.
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