Doggone sniffers a solution or not?
Wendy Leece
We asked our parent panelists this week: The district announced
recently that it will return to having drug-sniffing dogs as a
deterrent to drug abuse among students. Do you think it’s a good idea
and why or why not?
Bringing back the sniffing dogs is a good idea because it puts the
kids on notice that doing drugs is wrong and they are being watched.
And, should a student get caught, the parents, who may be in denial
about the problem, will be forced to seek help. But even if the dogs
don’t find any drugs, it doesn’t mean there are none. Forewarned,
kids will be creative in hiding them from the dogs.
A must-read each year for all parents, the famous zero tolerance
policy (https://www .nmusd.k12.ca.us /depts/ss/policy _4210.pdf)
details punishment for selling, or being under the influence or
possession of “any controlled substance” or paraphernalia. (It would
be great if all Newport-Mesa school district policies were online.
Irvine Unified lists its policy page as the No. 1 most requested page).
A child on drugs is one of a parent’s worst nightmares. But it
happens, even in the best families. The destructive powers of drugs
and alcohol show no mercy and don’t care about family income or
status. Impulsive and peer pressured, some teens become addicts
without their parents having a clue.
One of the hardest things for a parent to do is to admit that
their kid is on drugs. Usually the parent has a gut feeling because
the child has been acting suspiciously: erratic behavior, eye
problems, tantrums, staying up late, sleeping during the day, falling
grades, mysterious friends, truancy, weight loss, to name a few. But
knowing what to do next is challenging.
For more than 10 years, the district’s “Parent Project” has helped
dozens of parents who have problem teens and especially teens with
drug problems. Lynn Bloomberg, Bill Seery and Nancy Burchell are
three unsung heroes who have taught and groomed the intervention
program.
Now Pepe Montenegro is leading the Spanish speaking parent program
and Nancy is teaching a spin-off called “Design for Success:
Parenting Teens in 2005,” on April 11 and 18 at Harper School, with
an optional four-week support group. The first session is “Parenting
with the Personality Styles: Understanding what Works and Why” and
the second session is “Creating Effective Action Plans: Reduce Family
Conflict and Improve School Success.”
To register contact Pepe at 714.424.4763 or Nancy 714.424.8960.
The dogs are a deterrent, but parents have good sniffing abilities
also and should use them too.
* WENDY LEECE is a Costa Mesa parent and former school board
member.
I really want drugs out of the schools and was initially tempted
by the idea that just about any means that accomplishes that end is
probably OK, including having the drug dogs on the campuses.
However, there are many more fundamental rights at stake. I’m
satisfied that the nominal trade-off of losing one tool in the
anti-drug arsenal is far outweighed by the preservation of basic
civil liberties, making the drug dogs a bad idea in my mind. I also
think the drug dogs won’t catch much in light of the restrictions in
place, even further diminishing their value relative to the rights
concern. In the United States, everybody enjoys the right to not be a
suspect without reasonable cause and justification.
Having a drug-sniffing dog sniff every locker and car on campus
clearly puts every student into the position of being an automatic
suspect. We definitely have drug problems in our schools, but the
large majority of the student population are good kids and are not
using or carrying drugs at school. I don’t think that we get to
trample on their rights to root out the minority who might be
legitimate suspects.
Sniffing the cars on campus is also particularly troubling to me.
The cars are not the schools’ property and simply because they’re on
the school grounds hardly seems a justification enough to treat every
student’s vehicle, their private property, as suspicious.
I don’t know of any setting, other than borders and airports,
where every vehicle is subject to random inspection by authorities.
Lastly, due to the restrictions in place resulting from the ACLU
suit the last time these tactics were employed, it seems highly
unlikely that we’ll nab anybody except the few people who aren’t
smart enough to be careful. That probably leaves out the drug
dealers. The restrictions don’t allow the dogs to sniff the students’
person or backpacks. I’ve already heard several students laughingly
say that all one needs to do is keep the drugs in a pocket, purse, or
backpack. Given that attitude, it seems unlikely that the dogs will
even have much value as a deterrent or show of force.
* MARK GLEASON is a Costa Mesa parent.
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