Take Action Now: Stop Student Drug Testing

Discussion in 'Marijuana Legalization' started by RMJL, Feb 5, 2004.

  1. An email I received...



    Take Action Now!
    http://capwiz.com/norml2/issues/alert/?alertid=4977051&type=CO

    Dear Friends:

    Those who watched President Bush's State of the Union Speech last month were probably as outraged as I was at his call for a $23 million student drug testing program. At the time, many of us at NORML assumed that this was simply election year political grand standing. Much to our chagrin,
    President Bush has already found members of Congress willing to carry out this ill conceived plan.

    Last week, Rep. John Peterson (R-PA) and uber-drug warrior Mark Souder (R IN) introduced HR 3720, the "Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act." If passed, this bill would provide $23 million to schools willing to
    implement random drug testing of all students. President Bush sees student drug testing as a key component of his re-election campaign, so if we are to defeat this bill, NORML supporters need to act quickly.

    Random drug testing in schools has little impact on combatting youth drug use, and is an embarrassing and unjustifiable intrusion in students' lives. While President Bush credits school drug testing with a decline in
    teenage drug use in recent years, the latest Monitoring the Future study showed that usage rates declined equally in schools with and without drug testing programs. For an excellent summary of the futility of student drug testing, please read the article "No Silver Bullet" from the Drug
    Policy Alliance's Marsha Rosenbaum, Ph.D., which is posted below.

    At a time when many of our nation's public schools face severe overcrowding, a lack of books and outdated facilities, it is unwise to spend $23 million of taxpayer money requiring students to pee in a cup. NORML, Drug Policy Alliance, ACLU and numerous other organizations will be working hard to oppose this legislation in the coming months - but we need
    your help!

    Please take two minutes to send a pre-written letter to your member of the U.S. House of Representatives, urging him/her to oppose the Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities Act, by visiting: http://capwiz.com/norml2/issues/alert/alertid=4977051&type=CO

    Thank you for your support on this important issue.

    Regards,

    Kris Krane
    Associate Director
    NORML

    ##########################################

    No 'Silver Bullet'
    Marsha Rosenbaum, Ph.D.


    Last week it was "WMD" all over again in the President's State of the Union message. This time the unsubstantiated claims and wrongheaded policy were aimed at America's schoolchildren in this latest effort to get them to "just say no" to illegal drugs.

    Citing recent declines in illegal drug use among teenagers, and couched in loving and caring rhetoric, Bush credited random drug testing with the reduction. He then proposed an additional $23 million for schools opting to use, as Drug Czar John Walters touts, this "silver bullet." Immediately following, HR 3720 was introduced in the House by Rep. John
    Peterson (R-5th/PA), providing grants under the Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act to schools that institute random drug testing of all students.

    These proposals are based on shaky assumptions and political whim rather than sound research. Thoughtful investigations instead reveal that random drug testing does not deter drug use, and that it alienates students.

    Last year's large federally funded survey that showed declines in illegal drug use also compared schools with and without drug testing. It turned out there was no difference in illegal drug use among students in drug testing v. non drug testing schools. Aside from imparting misinformation
    about the deterrent value of testing, since only 5 percent of American schools currently utilize drug testing, Bush's crediting these programs for reductions in use is putting the cart before the horse.

    As drug testing is currently practiced, students must be observed (by a teacher or other adult) as they urinate to be sure the sample they produce is their own. The collection of a specimen is a humiliating, invasive violation of privacy. For an adolescent (as well as most adults), this experience is especially embarrassing.

    Testing can have the unanticipated effect of keeping students from participating in after-school, extracurricular programs - the very same activities that would fill their time during the peak teenage drug-using hours of 3-6 PM. A Tulia, Texas student summed it up when she said, "I know lots of kids who don't want to get into sports ... because they don't
    want to get drug tested. That's one of the reasons I'm not into any [activity]. I'm on medication, so I would always test positive, and then they would have to ask me about my medication, and I would be embarrassed. And what if I'm on my period? I would be too embarrassed."

    School districts across our country are in a financial crisis, with cuts further threatening the quality of education in America. The millions of dollars proposed for random drug testing could be used more wisely, having a real rather than symbolic impact on high school drug abuse.

    School administrators in Dublin, Ohio, for example, calculated that their $35,000 per year drug testing program was not cost-efficient. Of 1,473 students tested, at $24 each, 11 tested positive, for a total cost of $3,200 per "positive" student. They cancelled the program, and with the savings were able to hire a full-time counselor and provide prevention programs for all 3,581 students.

    Random drug testing may provide a false sense of security among school officials and parents who believe the program will let them know which students abuse drugs. In fact, testing will detect a tiny fraction of users, many of them without problems, and miss too many who are in
    trouble. If we are truly intent on helping students, we should listen to drug abuse professionals who know that detection of problems requires careful attention to signs such as truancy, erratic behavior, and falling grades.

    Some will argue that students need drug testing to help them say "no." But in 2003, the "State of Our Nation's Youth" survey found that, contrary to popular belief, most teens are not pressured to use drugs. The same survey found, much to the surprise of many parents (myself included), that 75
    percent of teenagers actually enjoy spending time with their parents, and feel they have a good relationship with them.

    Indeed, it's relationships built on trust, with parents, teachers and other caring adults, that accounts for the well being of teenagers. Drug testing actually has the effect of undermining parental influence, forcing adults to say, in essence, "I don't trust you," to their teenagers.

    As young adults, teens need to know we expect them to learn how to take responsibility for their health. They need science-based drug education, counseling, and support. If they don't learn make wise decisions about alcohol and other drugs in high school, how will they enter the post-high school world as responsible adults?

    Random drug testing may seem a panacea, but it is fraught with social, emotional and financial problems. Before we leap into another program (like DARE) that uses our teenagers as guinea pigs, we should carefully examine the many repercussions, pitfalls and alternatives to random student drug testing.

    Marsha Rosenbaum, PhD, is a medical sociologist who directs the Safety First project of the Drug Policy Alliance in San Francisco.

    Source: AlterNet (US)
    Author: Marsha Rosenbaum, Ph.D.
    Published: January 28, 2004
     
  2. You drug test me, I stick an electrical probe up your ass, no questions asked.
     
  3. Email sent.

    I really really hope this won't pass, but knowing fucking Bush...

    Holy shit I hope Kerry (or whoever) beats him into the ground in November. Words cannot express how much I hate this man.

    To all those who know history, Bush is this century's Herbert Hoover. Now where the fuck is this century's FDR?
     
  4. i'm a sophomore in college and the new shitty president of the university has decided that the professors should set an example for the students...now the professors are being randomly tested for drug use. needless to say no one is happy, especially the english and history departments! ;) oh, and i sent a letter...it was my first one...i'm so proud, until i get that little form back that gives me a stupid reason my representative is chicken shit...anyway, i'm trying! keep us posted!
     


  5. lmao!!!
     
  6. Wow, I forgot I even posted in this thread.

    I have no idea what I was thinking with the Hoover/FDR joke.

    Anyway, more people should email!

    Okay, thats all.

    *dives head first out of thread*
     
  7. I didnt read that whole thing, but i got the basic idea. Bush is an asshole who seriously needs to be assasinated. Like, twice.

    What would they do to you if you refused to piss in their cup?
     
  8. That's a load of shit. That's a complet and utter invasion of privacy and a bullshit scam to boot. Bush is just a dumb paranoid ass redneck prick who doesn't know what the hell he's doing. Weed is the only thing keeping half of the kids these days from just going batshit crazy.
     
  9. OMG, the thread is back from the dead!

    Dude, this thread is 6 years passed expired.

    I can't even come up with the bill, the bill number takes me to something about the postal service.
     
  10. we have a new president now btw
     
  11. If they have student drug testing then that will mark the end of the public school system.
     
  12. Haha this is funny...but whats not is if you wanted to park your car at school you had to get a parking pass, giving your rights to a random drug test. I got a fake one :cool:
     

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