Pubdate: Fri, 26 Dec 2003 Source: Alliston Herald (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/sc/alliston/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2224 Author: Steven J. Day SAFE SCHOOLS ACT IS A WAY TO FOREGO STUDENTS' RIGHTS At first I read your coverage on the local high school drug raids and just shook my head. But then I became outright enraged as I read further. The editorial talks about "Five others who clearly thought either their stashes wouldn't be found or were simply worth too much, decided to take their chances in the raid and are now facing criminal charges." How about five others who believe in innocent until proven guilty in a court of law and the right to an attorney? The OPP gave the kids the choice to hand over the drugs or face charges, so I guess they are just going to circumvent the courts altogether? The Safe Schools Act seems to be a way to forego students' rights. The editorial ends with, "there undoubtedly will be some parents out there with good children who will balk at the inconvenience of such a raid." Parents should balk at the of inconvenience of such a raid! Maybe they believe that their children are entitled to personal freedom and individual rights, or that they don't deserve to lose two hours of class time every other week. All the police will say is that a "significant" amount of drugs were seized. What amount of drugs made this worth it? If this is such a threat, why not let the public know the amount? Are these students gong to face expulsion and have their lives ruined because of the mistakes they make as a teenager? Zero tolerance doesn't work. Speaking of what doesn't work, the editorial points out that in spite of the raid across the street from Banting one week earlier, students still brought drugs with them to school. I think that proves that random raids obviously aren't deterrents! Police officers insist that the drug problem in our schools is small. Twenty-nine students at Banting were found with drugs, so the other 1771 should have to suffer this major inconvenience? Banting's principal talks about how cooperating will help them "make better choices." How? To give in to authority figures and not challenge a system that could be wrong? To not have their case heard in a court of law? To realize that they check their rights at the door when they enter a school? Debbie Clarke from the Simcoe County Board District School Board said "the joint operations are now fairly routine." Fairly routine? Students' aren't prisoners. They should not be subjected to random interruption of their learning environment for a crack down on less than one per cent of students. In the US such raids are being deemed unconstitutional and several parents are seeking legal action against the police and the school boards. I hope parents up here consider the same course of action. Lawsuits seem to be the only thing schools boards understand these days. Steven J. Day, Cookstown - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens