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NYCLU > News/Press > January
7, 2004, Southampton Drug Testing > Letter
Suffolk NYCLU Advises Southampton School District that
its Plan to Subject Students who Participate in Extracurricular
Activities To Random Drug Testing is Prohibited under the New York
State Constitution.
December 23, 2003
Linda J. Bruno, Ph.D.
Superintendent of Schools
Southampton Union Free Schools District
Re Mandatory Drug Testing of Students
Dear Dr. Bruno:
We understand that the Southampton Union Free Schools District
is considering adopting a policy that will authorize random, suspicionless
drug testing of those students who participate in voluntary extracurricular
activities. In this regard, Dr. Josephine DeVincenzi, Assistant
Superintendent, has noted that the District’s decision to
consider adopting such a policy is prompted not by any “specific
incident” in the District but rather motivated only by “a
growing concern about drug use.” It is, reportedly, believed
by District administrators that such random drug testing will prevent
substance abuse and promote wellness among Southampton’s students.
The desire to protect adolescents from the dangers of alcohol,
tobacco and other drugs is a sound and reasonable one, but a policy
that permits suspicionless drug testing of students who participate
in voluntary extracurricular activities presupposes a radical reformulation
of New York State law: under the District’s theory, a school
should be allowed to conduct suspicionless, general, searches simply
because deterrence alone justifies putting aside the protections
of the New York State Constitution.
Article I, Section 12 of the New York State Constitution is designed
to protect the “personal privacy and dignity”of New
York students against “unwarranted intrusions by the State”
and affords New York students a greater degree of protection than
does the Fourth Amendment of the federal Constitution. See Patchogue-Medford
Congress of Teachers v. Board of Education of the Patchogue-Medford
Union Free School District, 70 N.Y.2d 57, 70 (1987), citing People
v. Scott D., 34 N.Y.2d 483 (1974).
In these important cases, the New York Court of Appeals invalidated
random drug testing and random drug searches without individualized
and reasonable suspicion under Article I, section 12 of the State
Constitution.
The Southampton District, no doubt, is aware that the United States
Supreme Court has recently upheld against a Fourth Amendment challenge
an Oklahoma school district's policy requiring all middle and high
school students who would participate in extracurricular activities
to consent to random, suspicionless drug testing. See Board of Educ.
of Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 92 of Pottawatomie County v. Earls, 536
U.S. 822, 122 S.Ct. 2559, 153 L.Ed.2d 735 (2002). Yet the fact that
the U.S. Supreme Court has relaxed its scrutiny in this area in
Earls should not be taken as a signal to the District that the New
York Court of Appeals would reconsider the test formulated in Patchogue-Medford
and Scott D.
The New York Court of Appeals has routinely interpreted Article
I, Section 12 independently of its Federal counterpart when necessary
to assure that “our State’s citizens are adequately
protected from unreasonable governmental intrusions.” People
v. Keta, 79 N.Y.2d 474, 496-7 (1992). In particular, the Court of
Appeals has noted that “an independent construction of our
own State Constitution is particularly appropriate where a sharp
or sudden change in direction by the Unites States Supreme Court
dramatically narrows fundamental constitutional rights that our
citizens have long assumed to be part of their birthright.”
Id., citing People v. Griminger, 71 N.Y.2d 635 (1988).
The Earls decision is the broadest drug testing the Supreme Court
has yet permitted for young people who are not under any suspicion
of wrongdoing. It applies to students who join competitive after-school
activities or teams, a category that includes many if not most middle-school
and high-school students. The Earls decision is precisely the “sudden
change in direction [that] dramatically narrows [the] fundamental
constitutional rights” of students referenced by the Court
of Appeals in Keta and Griminger. In New York State, the Patchogue-Medford
and Scott D. decisions provide the governing standard. Random drug
testing without individualized and reasonable suspicion is impermissible.
As an agency charged with the responsibility to educate our children,
we know that the School District will want to comply with the law.
For we teach our children about respect for the law by the example
we set. We are available to discuss the issues raised in this letter
further with you.
Very truly yours,
Donna Lieberman
Executive Director
Jared Feuer
Director, Suffolk County Chapter
Beth Haroules
Staff Attorney
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