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Hall BOE to hear report on expanding drug testing to band, chorus, clubs

By Ken Stanford Contributing Editor
Posted 9:46AM on Sunday 2nd December 2007 ( 16 years ago )
GAINESVILLE - The Hall County Board of Education will hear a report Monday on a proposal to expand mandatory drug testing of high school athletes to include other areas of extra-curricular activities.

A committee has been studying expanding it to middle school athletes but in September school officials said it was also considering requiring it of students participating in band, chorus, and clubs as well as those applying for driving permits.

School officials have emphasized that before any changes are made, a series of public hearings will be held.

The Drug Testing Review Committee will issue its report at the school board work session which will be held Monday at 5:30 at school system headquarters on Green Street.

"Since we've had the program for three years (we thought) it would be a good time to just kind of review where we've been and where we're going and see if there's anything we may want to do to change the program to make it stronger to make it stronger," school system spokesman Gordon Higgins said in August when plans for the committee were announced.

Hall County initiated testing in the fall of 2004. Higgins said earlier this year eight athletes tested positive that first year. In March, Hall conducted its ninth round of tests, and all came back negative, according to Higgins.

Other systems in northeast Georgia that conduct random drug testing include Lumpkin, Rabun and White. The tests cost around $25 per student and screen for drugs such as marijuana, cocaine, amphetamines, opiates and PCP.

Under the current drug screening program, any student-athlete who participates in a sport requiring a physical must submit to random drug testing. The tests, conducted and evaluated by the Northeast Georgia Health System Toxicology Department, are done at each school at various times during the school year under the supervision of the school's administration. The screen samples are taken by health system technicians back to their lab for evaluation.

School administration is informed within 48 hours of the results. In the case of a reported positive, a medical review officer calls the parent(s) of the student-athlete to inform them and to conduct an interview, answering any questions regarding the procedures followed to obtain the reported results. What follows is a meeting with the parents, their child, and the school administration to outline the provisions that must be met for the student-athlete to have an opportunity to continue participation. The most important piece at this juncture is intervention, which calls the parents to attend the system's SUPER ONE program with their child.
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