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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CT: Edu: Editorial: Don't Let Schools Invade Students'
Title:US CT: Edu: Editorial: Don't Let Schools Invade Students'
Published On:2007-03-28
Source:Daily Campus, The (UConn, CT Edu)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 09:25:51
DON'T LET SCHOOLS INVADE STUDENTS' PRIVACY

The increase of random drug testing in public middle and high schools
across the country is an alarming trend.

While Connecticut and New York do not currently allow random drug
testing, the prospect is looming as neighboring states, like New
Jersey, have adopted widespread and successful random drug testing
plans.

With federal reports indicating that as many as one new school
district a month adds random drug testing to its policies, students
and parents must be vigilant and oppose these blatant invasions of
privacy and parental rights.

The popularity of random drug testing in public schools has increased
dramatically in recent years in the aftermath of a 2002 Supreme Court
decision allowing random drug testing for students who participate in
extracurricular activities. While testing athletes for performance
enhancing drugs is one thing, new school policies go so far as to test
all students involved in any extracurricular activity, as well as
those students exercising any school privileges - such as use of the
school parking lot. It is in this way that schools deceptively make
the drug tests voluntary, as students can only waive a drug test by
conceding school privileges. This is an unfortunate abuse of power
that infringes on the students' right to privacy.

One of the most important rights we have as Americans is an inherent
right to privacy.

While there are limits to what kind of drug testing should be allowed,
even staunch opponents of school testing will still condone a random
drug test if a student is assumed to be under the influence at school.

However, random tests of students, when no visible disruption is seen
in their behavior at school, is a violation of their privacy.

In some school districts in New Jersey, they have begun using a new
test that is so sensitive that it can detect alcohol in a student's
body even if the student consumed the alcohol Friday night and was
tested Monday morning.

Tests like these, which measure or indicate what a student has done
outside of school and off school property, overstep the boundaries of
acceptability. Public schools are only charged with keeping their
students safe in school - if students are coming to school drunk, that
is a problem, but if they are drinking, or consuming illegal drugs for
that matter, outside of school and they are not disrupting the
classroom environment, then they have the right to do that without
fear of repercussions in school.

Schools are designed as a means to educate the young members of our
society.

They are not designed to enforce the local and federal drug laws of
our society, and thus, should not be used for that purpose.
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