The greatest threat to international sport isn't the pay offs in Salt Lake City, but
the use of dangerous performance-enhancing drugs. Their use threatens
the very foundation of sport. The integrity, the image and even the existence
of elite-level international competition is in jeopardy. Every world-class
event is somehow tainted by "doping", the use of illicit performance-enhancing
drugs.
STUDENT
DRUG SCREENING
The Board of Education
values student athletes not only for their athletic talent but also
for their leadership and scholastic abilities. Student athletes, as
role models for other students, are a key to our goal of providing the
best possible education program for all students. To achieve our goal
and to maximize the skills and talents of our students, it is important
that every student, and each employee, of our school system understand
the dangers of tobacco, drug and alcohol abuse. This policy statement
should clarify our position on student athlete tobacco, drug and alcohol
use. For the purposes of this policy, school sports teams and cheerleading
squads are, therefore, termed student athletes by the Board of Education.
In addition, all of these groups perform functions that display them
as role models. Participation in extra-curricular activities is a privilege
which can be taken away for failure to comply with this policy. The
Board reserves the right to depart from this policy where it deems it
is appropriate. Except where specifically prohibited by law, the guidelines
contained within this document may be changed by the Board at any time.
Students covered by this policy will be informed of changes.
It's the spring
of the year 2000, and you are looking forward to your first summer of
the new Millennium. Baseball season has started, the NBA playoffs are
on the horizon, Wimbledon, the French Open, and the US Open are all
ahead of you. And best of all, this is an Olympic year. During the fall,
your television will be taken over by gymnastics, soccer, softball,
and track & field with interesting vignettes telling the amazing stories
of sacrifice and hardship leading up to Olympic glory. You even remember,
with misty eyed nostalgia, your days as a high school athlete; its not
important that it was in the sphere of intramural. YOU WERE A CONTENDER!
If you had applied yourself, you too could have been an Olympian. Now,
you are a hard working attorney looking forward to a summer of sitting
on your couch and watching other great athletes. Little did you know
that you would play a part in the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.
Isn't life funny?
How do I know
if one of my athletes is abusing alcohol, drugs, or both? Assessing
a potential alcohol or drug problem is a difficult and often frustrating
process. Your influential role as a coach and a confidant, however,
places you in a unique position to successfully reach a troubled student.
What should coaches
look for? There are many reasons why students may show the following
signs and symptoms. The behavior may or may not be alcohol or drug related.
When these behavior patterns occur with some regularity and are interfering
with the student's performance, it's time to intervene.
Behavioral Patterns:
Actions
Since the June
1995 U. S. Supreme Court ruling in support of random interscholastic
student athlete drug testing, more schools then ever before have begun
either mandatory, reasonable suspicion or voluntary types of drug testing
as they battle drug abuse by their students. By far most student drug
testing programs consist of mandatory testing of only student athletes
since the U.S. Supreme Court upheld this type of testing. Some schools
have begun drug testing all co-curricular students or students wishing
to drive to school. This latter action was challenged in Rush County,
Indiana, and upheld by the District Court. When appealed to the U. S.
Supreme Court they allowed the District Court ruling to stand.
USADA is an independent legal entity not subject to the control of the USOC. The USOC has contracted with USADA to conduct drug testing and results management for participants in the Olympic movement within the United States and to provide educational information to those participants. For the purposes of transmittal of information by USADA, the USOC is USADA’s client/ However, the USOC has authorized USADA to transmit information simultaneously to the relevant National governing Body (“NGB”), International Federation (“IF”) the World Anti-Doping Agency (“WADA”) and involved athlete.