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NEW YORK - The Supreme Court today
narrowly upheld school drug testing of students involved in extracurricular
activities, a decision the American Civil Liberties Union said will only set up
more barriers to keeping children off drugs. Home
Remedies To Pass Drug Test
"Every available study demonstrates that
the single best way to prevent drug use among students is to engage them in
extra-curricular activities," said Graham Boyd, Director of the ACLU's Drug
Policy Litigation Project, who argued the case before the Justices in March.
"The Court has now endorsed school
policies setting up barriers to these positive activities, which is dangerous
both for the Constitution and safety of America's children," Boyd said.
The ACLU said the ruling also sounds an
ominous note for the future of privacy in America.
"If drug testing now becomes a rite of
passage for an entire generation of students, the door will be cracked open
wider to the government's inevitable demands for DNA, medical records, financial
information and other personal data," Boyd said.
At issue in Board of Education v. Earls,
No. 01-332, was an Oklahoma School District policy that required a urine test of
all students in grades 7-12 who sign up for non-athletic extracurricular
activities.
Today's ruling reverses a federal appeals
court in Colorado, which struck down the policy as unconstitutional in March
2001. The decision is the broadest drug testing the court has yet permitted for
young people who are not under any suspicion of wrongdoing. It applies to
students who join competitive after-school activities or teams, a category that
includes many if not most middle-school and high-school students.
The case is the culmination of a landmark
legal challenge brought by the ACLU on behalf of Lindsay and Lacey Earls and
Daniel James, all of Tecumseh -- a small town in Oklahoma 30 miles southeast of
the state capital -- who said that refusal to take the intrusive test would mean
being shut out of important school activities like Quiz Bowl, choir and Future
Farmers of America.
"I'm in college now, but I'm really sad
that every other school kid in America might have to go through a humiliating
urine test like I did just to join the choir or the debate team," said Lindsay
Earls, a lead plaintiff in the case. "I also worry that as a result of this
decision more employers are going to start drug testing, and that I'll always be
under suspicion for something I've never done and never intend to do."
Notwithstanding the Supreme Court's
ruling, school districts around the country have rejected drug testing. Just
last night, a school district in Dublin, Ohio repealed its two-year drug-testing
program for student athletes, citing mixed reviews about its effectiveness.
The move underscores the opinion of
doctors, social workers and education professionals - many of whom submitted
friend-of-the-court briefs supporting the ACLU challenge - that students and
student athletes should not be singled out for involuntary screening for drugs.
The groups, which include the American
Academy of Pediatrics, the National Education Association and the National
Association of Social Workers, cite the importance of confidentiality and
autonomy for adolescents and the lack of accuracy in detecting certain drugs.
In an effort to assist students who may
now face school drug testing as a result of today's ruling, the ACLU has created
a guide for students, "Just Say No to Random Drug Testing," online at
http://www.aclu.org/issues/drugpolicy/say_no.html.
The guide explains how students can help
convince their schools that drug testing is the wrong approach to keeping kids
off drugs.
Home Remedies To Pass Drug Test
Information From Always Test Clean.
How to pass a
drug test is the question more and more people are faced with each and every day. Employee
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random drug testing is often the condition of employment.
If this is the major concern in your life, you have come to the
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More Information check out our information to
pass drug
test
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