April 12,
2001
Web posted at: 9:29 a.m. EDT (1329 GMT)
(FINDLAW) -- The 10th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled recently that a Tecumseh, Oklahoma,
high school could not administer random drug tests to students who
wanted to participate in extracurricular activities -- even though
the school used the results to send drug users to treatment.
A student, represented by
the American Civil Liberties Union, challenged the tests on Fourth
Amendment grounds, the right to privacy and protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures.
Although the legal issue is
a legitimately close call, the adversarial nature of the proceedings
is troubling. If sending kids to drug treatment is the right thing
to do, are we being overly concerned with their right to privacy?
The court and students'
rights
The Tecumseh ruling must be read in light of two seminal U.S.
Supreme Court opinions on students' Fourth Amendment rights.
In the 1980s, in New Jersey
v. T.L.O., the court held that the Fourth Amendment applies when
school officials search students (drug testing is a search).
The court watered down its
opinion, however, by noting that the amendment's warrant and
probable cause requirements can be chucked in favor of a vague
standard of reasonableness.
More recently, in Vernonia
School District 47J v. Acton, the court allowed an Oregon school to
test student athletes for drugs.
In addressing the Fourth
Amendment issues, the court found that student-athletes had a lesser
expectation of privacy than other students did, because the athletes
subjected themselves to physical exams, showered communally and so
on.
Equally important, the court
held, was the fact that the drug testing policy was specifically not
designed to serve up toking tailbacks to the police: The test
results went only to school officials, and the consequence of
positive tests was mandatory drug treatment.
Drug treatment vs. privacy
In Tecumseh, the ACLU challenged a drug testing policy that applied
not just to athletes but to every student who participated in
extracurricular activities.
The Tecumseh case differs
from the Supreme Court's student-athlete case in important ways.
Non-athletic extracurricular
activities do not come at the same cost to privacy that athletic
activity does: You don't need a physical to write for the newspaper,
and you do not have to shower with the rest of the chess team.
In one critical respect,
however, the Tecumseh and Vernonia cases are the same: The programs
were aimed at getting help to young drug users.
In Tecumseh, the test
results went only to school officials, not to the police, and the
effect of positive tests was mandatory drug treatment.
In both cases, the schools
were acting in their roles as the guardians of children, trying to
protect young bodies and minds from drugs.
ACLU can't have it both ways
The real problem with the Tecumseh case is not the outcome, but the
plaintiff's approach.
The student who sued the
Tecumseh school was represented by the ACLU. This in itself is
unremarkable: The ACLU has been challenging school testing of
students in New Jersey, Connecticut and other states for years now.
What is noteworthy, however,
is that for years the ACLU and others have promoted what they see as
a closely related position: that drug use should not be
indiscriminately criminalized, and should be viewed more as a
problem of addiction requiring treatment.
These two positions -- the
one, highly protective of privacy rights; the other, highly critical
of criminalizing drug use -- appear to be of a piece.
After all, if prosecuting
people for drug possession is a bad idea, wouldn't you want to limit
the state's ability to find out if you have been using drugs? And if
students have privacy rights just like adults, wouldn't these rights
extend to protection against random drug tests?
But these two positions are
actually in tension.
Why should we be so
solicitous of a student drug user's privacy, if the only result of
violating it is to provide her with a benefit she so desperately
needs?
Indeed, by emphasizing her
right to privacy, we undermine the message that treatment is a
benefit at all. If she feels like she got caught, she is unlikely to
view the consequences as benign, much less beneficial.
A case no one wins
When it comes to student drug users, the ACLU is right: Our first
approach should be to try to help them, to give them treatment,
counseling and attention.
We should do so for lots of
reasons: We should never write off children as criminals until we
have tried to help. If successful, treatment is better (and cheaper)
for both the child and society. Ultimately, trying to correct kids
rather than punishing them is what grownups are supposed to do.
Helping students is not the
same thing as punishing them. The fifth grader told to clean up his
mess, the eighth grader deprived of her cigarettes, and the junior
forced to go to drug treatment:
Each no doubt views his or
her assigned fate as punitive; each suffers a loss of liberty at the
hands of a powerful adult.
As grownups, we know better.
In all of these examples, the school is doing exactly what schools
are supposed to do: correcting students' behavior.
The students may disagree.
They may, through the distorted lens of adolescence, view all of
this as essentially adversarial. That, as Flannery O'Connor said, is
regrettable, but their tastes are not to be consulted; they are
being formed.
If treating young drug users
is simply the right thing to do, then treating their privacy with
too much deference is a mistake.
To see why, assume for the
moment that schoolteachers have a reasonable suspicion that a
student is using drugs.
Let's say another student
tells a teacher that Justin was seen smoking marijuana, and that
Britney has bragged about using Ecstasy at rave parties. As the law
stands now, this would be enough -- remember, students do not have
the same rights that adults have -- for the school to search the
students' personal effects and lockers, and maybe even to test them
for drugs.
Justin and Britney have been
"ratted out" and "busted." How could they view anything the school
does with them as anything but invasive and punitive?
The school will have treated
them as miscreants ("criminals" is too strong a word) and they will
view the school and themselves accordingly. And if the ACLU is there
to file a lawsuit on their behalf, their view will have been
vindicated by a group of adults.
Compare this to Tecumseh's
approach. Since no one is singled out or caught, no one can be
stigmatized for being tested. Since the school's search for drugs is
suspicion-less, no one can feel suspected. Again, our kids may not
see it this way. That is OK.
A parent who says, "This
will hurt me more than it does you," and then hits his kids, is a
liar.
A school that tells students
it will not punish drug users, then randomly tests and sends drug
users to treatment, is telling the truth.
In time, our kids will
figure out the difference.
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