Czar - Drug Test Students

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The420Guy

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Youths are more dependent on marijuana than cigarettes or alcohol,
provoking the White House drug czar to call for drug testing at middle and
high schools.

John Walters, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, made
the statement during a keynote speech at a conference attended by members
of the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting at Embassy Suites on Tuesday
night. Walters said school drug testing would not be used to punish
children, but the results can be used for rehabilitation and education.
Drug testing is used for Fortune 500 executives, pilots and law
enforcement. It will work for teenagers, Walters told the dinner crowd of
about 240.

Referencing a short PowerPoint presentation, Walters said marijuana use
among 12- to 17-year-olds is higher than any other drug. When surveyed, 42
percent of the nation's youth in that age range said they had used
marijuana the prior month, he said.

"Marijuana is the largest need for treatment needs," he said. "Not only is
it a gateway, but a dead end for young people."

The drug czar, appointed in December 2001 by President Bush, said
advertisements will continue about the dangers of drug use. Television ads
after the September 2001 terrorist attacks focused on revenues from
marijuana having aided anti-American efforts.

"Those who were using hated those ads," Walters said. "Those who suffered,
especially our neighbors in Mexico and Colombia, said it was about time."
The drug czar did not mention that drug offenders should serve time for
their crime.

When he was appointed, Walters was known for his stance that users should
receive jail sentences rather than treatment. Walters was unavailable for
comment afterward.

He was whisked away by Secret Service to catch a flight back to
Washington, D.C. The crowd was full of military officials, undercover
agents with goatees and long hair and clean-cut law enforcement officers.

CAMP is a multi-agency task force that concentrates on the eradication of
marijuana farms on California land. It comprises 70 local, state and
federal organizations. This year a record 466,054 plants were seized,
breaking the goal of 352,000. The wholesale value was estimated at $1.9
billion.

Seventy-five percent of the seized crop was being grown on public land.
Before the event Val Jimenez, CAMP director, said El Dorado County is not
a major location for outdoor cultivation, but added, the "potential is
there, no doubt." Outdoor planting at South Shore is relatively minuscule.

The elevation and winter temperatures make it a foolish endeavor. Chris
Elliott, the task force commander for SLEDNET, South Shore's drug
enforcement agency, said most growing occurs indoors.

The foothills of El Dorado County are more likely to have outdoor
marijuana gardens, although figures released by the California attorney
general's office did not include El Dorado in a 2003 list of plant
seizures by county. A spokeswoman for Attorney General Bill Lockyer said
if any plants were seized by CAMP officials this year in El Dorado County,
the number was insignificant.


Author: William Ferchland
Source: Tahoe Daily Tribune
Contact: tribune@tahoe.com
Website: Lake Tahoe
 
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