December 21, 2008
Hawaii teachers take pay raise, fight drug testing
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Only a handful of other school districts nationwide require random teacher drug testing of established employees, many of them in Kentucky. The Hawaii State Teachers Association says only five school districts in the country have implemented random drug testing, but the National Education Association didn't have a count of how many schools randomly test teachers.

In the Knott County school district in rural eastern Kentucky, one-fourth of teachers have been randomly tested for drugs annually since 2004, when administrators who wanted to drug-test students involved in extracurricular activities decided to hold teachers to the same standard.

"The teachers didn't like the random part at first. Suspicionless testing is what they were concerned about," said William Madden, director of pupil personnel for the seven-school, 2,570-student district. "It's going real well. Everyone is accepting it."

The Knott County testing started after a federal judge ruled that drug testing without suspicion of use had been upheld in a previous case in Knox County, Tenn. However, the Knox County case dealt with testing when teachers were hired rather than continuous, random testing of all teachers. Today, Knox County does not randomly test its existing teachers.

Hawaii's Republican Gov. Linda Lingle sought random teacher drug testing after the spate of teacher arrests. The state could not produce evidence teacher drug use is on the rise.

"There were a few cases all at once, and that's why the issue came about," said Dana Shishido, a third-grade teacher at Wheeler Elementary School who opposes random testing. "It was insulting to look at the pay raise, and that it had to come tied to the issue of random drug testing."

The teachers approved the contract in April 2007 with a vote of 61 percent in favor. By January, when they receive some of the pay hikes, the starting annual pay for new teachers will be $43,157, and teachers with more than 33 years of experience will earn $79,170 a year.

"Few if any teachers test positive because it's not something that people who go into teaching do. It's not part of the teaching culture," said Michael Simpson, assistant general counsel for the National Education Association. "It's an expensive program, and the money can be better spent reducing class sizes or providing needed resources."

About 4 percent of teachers nationwide reported using illegal drugs, among the lowest rates of any profession, according to a 2007 study from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, an agency within the Health and Human Services Department. The federal study found the overall drug usage rate among full-time workers was 8.2 percent.

Honolulu city workers, including trash collectors, treatment plant workers and groundskeepers, agreed to random drug testing earlier this year. Those with commercial driver's licenses and emergency workers like police, paramedics and firefighters also must consent to random testing.

Regardless of the labor relations board's decision, the debate may end up in court. The American Civil Liberties Union has said it plans to sue the state claiming the program violates privacy rights, costs taxpayers too much money and does little to curb drug use.

Hawaii has some of the strictest privacy protections in the nation written into the state constitution, and those rights would have to be weighed against the force of a binding contract approved by a majority vote.

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Posted By: J (12:44am 12-22-2008)
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That's awesome. Because no matter what they're offered in return, the random testing is STILL unconstitutional. The violation remains, and should never be allowed to stand.

No one should be compelled to prove themselves innocent in this country. No one. Period. The US was founded on principles such as this one. They have not changed.

By the way, everyone still has the right to own a gun. That hasn't changed, either. Unlike many hypocritical liberals, I don't pick and choose which parts of the Bill of Rights I think should stand. It's all good.

I hope they keep their pay raise, too. No "deal" of this nature should have ever even been considered valid in this nation and under our rules.

Posted By: True WV (7:45am 12-22-2008)
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"the Knox County case dealt with testing when teachers were hired rather than continuous, random testing of all teachers. Today, Knox County does not randomly test its existing teachers." Kanawha test all newly hired teachers. Why waste money testing the innocent. Spend money testing those who present cause to test them. Or is that profiling, which works but is frowned upon by the liberals?

Posted By: smarbap (12:52am 12-22-2008)
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This story speaks volumes about the integrity of today's government school teachers.

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