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News (Media Awareness Project) - US AL: Drug Tests' Cost, Fairness Discussed At Public Hearing
Title:US AL: Drug Tests' Cost, Fairness Discussed At Public Hearing
Published On:2002-05-31
Source:Decatur Daily (AL)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 06:08:37
DRUG TESTS' COST, FAIRNESS DISCUSSED AT PUBLIC HEARING

The community got its first chance to voice opinions Thursday night at
Austin High School in a public hearing on a drug-testing proposal for
Decatur's high schools.

But not many people were interested. Only 24 people attended. Most were
school board members, staff and members of the committee that developed the
plan.

Fairness and cost were the two main points of discussion on the committee's
recommendation to test students involved in competitive extracurricular
activities.

A couple of people among a handful of parents of Austin students expressed
concern that only students participating in athletics, band, chorus, JROTC
drill team, math team and 10 other competitive activities would be tested.

One woman, who did not give her name and left before the meeting was
finished, said she would consider pulling her daughter out of athletics
before subjecting her to a drug test that she thought was unfair.

"I'm all for drug tests, but I'm dead set against testing just athletes,"
she said.

Steve Locke, a father of a recent graduate and another child in the eighth
grade, also said the drug tests do not test enough of the students. He
questioned whether the cost, estimated at between $15,000 and $18,000 per
year, was worth testing such a small percentage of students.

"I don't think 30 percent of the population of students is worth spending
that money, when it can be spent on something more useful," said Locke, who
thinks the cost will also be higher than committee estimated. "All we've
heard from the city of Decatur is we don't have enough money. I don't see
that random tests would be of that much benefit."

Locke said the students who would be subject to the tests are not the ones
that usually get involved in drugs. He favors just testing "for cause"
because coaches and sponsors are around these students enough to know when
they might be using drugs.
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