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STALE DRUG TESTING

With the Southwest Allen County Schools board poised to adopt language Tuesday spelling out its first random drug testing policy, it is significant to note that the school system will not test for a drug with high potential for abuse by athletes: steroids.

Steroid testing is not on SACS' agenda because of its high financial costs, several hundred dollars for a single test.  Warsaw High School, which began drug testing in the 1990s, isn't testing for steroids, either.  Manchester High School's policy leaves open the possibility of steroid hunts based on probable cause.  If a freshman, for example, ends the year a scrawny lad but returns in August for football tryouts ripped beyond the capability of merely sucking down dietary supplements and pumping iron, the administration could demand a steroid test.

This page has opposed random drug testing of students because it violates their rights against searches without cause and because its effectiveness is questionable.  If school officials are going to test, though, they need to be looking for drugs with the highest potential for abuse, and they need to anticipate which drugs students may be using in the future.  While steroid tests are cost-prohibitive now, they may become more affordable in the future.

Nationally, New Mexico Gov.  Bill Richardson pledged to spend $330,000 for steroid testing.  On Thursday, Florida's House passed a measure 118-0 that would create a pilot program to test students in a sport to be selected by the state's governing body for prep sports.  High schools would also have to adopt anti-steroid policies.

Fortunately, another increasingly popular drug with high potential for abuse - -- methamphetamine -- is among the drugs school systems routinely test for.

Still, schools should regularly review whether the tests are worth the financial costs as well as invasion of students' privacy.  Manchester High School, for example, has yet to nab a single student since it began random testing in 2003.  Warsaw High School, which began testing in the 1990s, has yielded some positive tests.

In Manchester, the fact that no one has been caught in random testing partly proves the system is working, vice principal Randy Self believes, although he was quick to point out that he doesn't delude himself into believing that drinking and drug taking isn't an issue in the community.

At Warsaw High School, assistant athletic director Dave Anson says results there prove the system works by netting students before they fall even further into illicit drug use.

It's hard to doubt the sincerity expressed by those who support random drug testing of secondary school students.  Drug use and abuse is a serious health crisis.  Yet the earnestness for testing espoused by school administrators, coaches, teachers, parents and even students does not automatically translate into good policy.