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As the summer draws to a close, kids
across America are once again preparing to go back to school. And soon these
students may find themselves being tested on more than math, English, and
science. How To Pass 10 Panel Drug Test
More and more schools are testing kids for
drug use. And so far, the courts are divided on the question of when and why
schools may test students for drugs. Laws vary from state to state, in part
because some state constitutions provide more protection than others do for
students' privacy rights.
The Supreme Court ruled in 1995 in a case
called Vernonia School District v. Acton that schools may test entire teams of
student athletes, even if individual team members are not suspected of using
drugs.
In August 2000, the Indiana Court of
Appeals struck down a school's policy of performing drug tests on students who
participate in sports or other extracurricular activities, or who drive to
school. A lawyer for the Indiana Civil Liberties Union, which argued the appeal,
said that a school may test an individual student if he or she is suspected of
using drugs, but not an entire group of students who are under no such
suspicion.
Also in August, the ACLU of New Jersey
filed a lawsuit challenging a similar drug testing policy in a New Jersey high
school.
In the same month, Maryland school
officials who removed 18 high school students from classes and forced them to
have their urine tested on the stage of their school auditorium agreed to stop
all student drug testing in Talbot County's schools and to pay damages to the
students.
The school's policy of testing only
students who were suspected of using drugs was legal. But the ACLU of Maryland
had sued the school for forcibly testing the students -- on threat of suspension
or even expulsion -- solely because others had alleged that they attended a
private, off-campus social event where drugs were rumored to have been used.
The case shows how even a drug testing
policy that is fair in theory can be used unfairly in practice, and how even a
well-intentioned program can end up violating students' rights.
One school in Texas hasn't bothered to
limit its drug testing to participants in certain activities or classes. Its
policy requires every student to undergo random drug testing. One father
refused, on principle, to have his son tested, although he says he is certain
that the boy does not use drugs. Because he did not undergo the test, the boy is
being punished as if he had taken the test and failed. The lawsuit, which was
filed by the ACLU's national Drug Policy Litigation Project, is in federal
district court.
In recent years, schools have become
increasingly intrusive in their searches for drugs and weapons. Some now
routinely search students' lockers and backpacks, bring in drug-sniffing dogs,
and even strip-search students. Urine testing is part of this alarming trend.
Studies show, however, that drug testing
is frequently inaccurate. Moreover, schools that require students to take drug
tests in order to join sports teams or other extracurricular groups are
discouraging young people from participating in activities that have important
benefits -- and that may, in fact, keep them from experimenting with drugs.
The ACLU is at the forefront of the fight
to stop unconstitutional drug testing of students. If your school is conducting
random or broad drug testing, it may be violating students' constitutional
rights. If such a program is now in place, or is planned for the future, you can
take action. How To Pass 10 Panel Drug Test
Get all the facts about who is being
tested and why, by acquiring a copy of the written policy. Tell your parents
about the policy and ask them to help challenge it. Enlist the help of a
sympathetic teacher or other school staff member. Call a meeting with other
concerned students and arrange a meeting with school officials to express your
concerns about the policy. If your school is unresponsive, contact your local
ACLU affiliate for help. Remember: students do have rights.
How To Pass 10 Panel 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
screenings are on the rise, corporations have
their own rules and
random drug testing is often the condition of employment.
If this is the major concern in your life, you have come to the
right place. ATC products will shield you from detection of
controlled substances, prescription and non-prescription preparations, as well as other
things you might not want people to know about like tobacco usage. For
More Information check out our information to
pass drug
test
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