Breathalyzer test required for Homecoming Dance

Hitthespot

New member
My 17 year old son and I was talking last night and he said that everyone entering the high school for the homecoming dance was required to take a Breathalyer test. Well I laughed and said, "we'll get you high school kids straightened out yet." Obviously I thought he was kidding. Soon into our conversation I realized he was telling the truth, they really did have to take a breath test to enter the highschool dance.

Now I'm no lawyer or law expert by any means but this sounds like a civil rights violation to me. What next, urine sample for drugs? Blood Test for the Aids virus or hepititis?

I would love to hear your guys take on this?
 
Since it is a school function involving students, there is a much diminished right of privacy than in other places involving other people. Frankly, as a parent of two fairly recent HS grads, I would be in favor of testing. Now, when you start getting into drug screens for participation in athletics and other school activities, that crosses a personal line I have (yes, I have read of some schools doing this and it being upheld).
 
Yeah sure, what do HS kids want to do with with "dignity", anyway? teach e'm young to accept the fact that authority wants them to do things 'for their own good'. Control has nothing to do with it, I'll bet, right? Right. What a good way to ingrain the thought that presumed innocence is an outdated idea, so when they get to voting age, we can sponge away that blight :rolleyes:

And before the 'rents get all fussy with me: want to make your kid REAL safe? Don't let them go to a dance or school activity at all. Even if THEY aren't drinking, a drunk driver could still kill them

But, two things do spring to mind:

1) Private school or public?

2) What does this have to do with firearms? :)
 
Chris_B said:
2) What does this have to do with firearms?

From the sticky at the top of the forum:
Discussions in this forum will be centered upon legal issues as they relate to the 2nd Amendment and other Civil Rights. Constitutional law (which would encompass separation of powers, the impairment of contracts clause, the full faith and credit clause, etc., as well as the Bill of Rights) will also be on topic.
 
Yeah sure, what do HS kids want to do with with "dignity", anyway? teach e'm young to accept the fact that authority wants them to do things 'for their own good'. Control has nothing to do with it, I'll bet, right? Right. What a good way to ingrain the thought that presumed innocence is an outdated idea, so when they get to voting age, we can sponge away that blight

:) ;)
 
What part of "child" have we seemed to have forgotten?

The kind of shenanigans/behavior now accepted as kids-will-be-kids would never have been dreamed of/much tolerated during my own (and many others on this forum) HS days. Given the kids have apparently demonstrated no self-control, it must necessarily be imposed externally.

Respect is earned, not given away in Cracker Jack boxes to make someone "feel good"

Xin Loi.
 
Does anyone realize how many "kids" are killed each year by being with a drunk driver.
I applaude the school for their actions. Drunks don't belong at a school function and the Breathalyzer test is non intrusive not like a blood or urine test.
 
As a student in many schools,you give up some rights to go there.You may be issued a locker,but the school does not need a search warrant to look into it.If you don't like that,go somewhere else.
Unfortunately this isn't the 1950's in Mayberry.There are many kids out of control and the school must take certain precautions to keep the majority safe.
 
So, armsmaster270, do you feel that non-critical employees and non-emergency service employees should all have to consent to breathalyzers when they arrive for a shift at work?

(Random screens have been applied to pilots for some years now; same for military; I'd imagine same for LE and EMS. However, we agree to those terms of employment, and don't have to go to work there. Also, the unions for all those organizations tended to have fought tooth and nail...) Edit: military don't have unions. I realize that. Military also are subject to UCMJ, and give up some rights when they take the oath.

Since breathalyers are non-intrusive, perhaps you feel you should be able to administer them to drivers at impromptu roadblocks? Driving is a privilege, after all, and people could opt not to drive.

I'm pretty appalled at all the strident 2nd Amendment supporters in here, who routinely decry the government pulling its Big Brother routine and wanting to regulate away our guns "for the good of the children," and yet these same folks seem to think breathalzying every kid that goes to a school function is not only acceptable but laudable.

Actually, I'm past appalled. I'm disgusted.
 
Some people commit crimes; therefore, we're going to treat everyone as a suspect. That worked just fine in the Soviet Union and China today.
 
Going to the dance is a privilege not a right. That's like driving is not a right it's a privilege. Owning a gun is a right. Voting is a right. Its easier to infringe on a privilege than a right. The government can require a test to use a privilege. Like you have to pass a test to drive but not to vote. As is becoming clearer every day you don’t need to pass a test to own a gun, it’s a right. Going to the dance can require you to pass a test of some kind, like a breathalyzer because it’s not a right..
 
So, shotgun693, you'd be ok with random roadblocks and breathalyers for all drivers?

As you pointed out, driving is considered a privilege, not a right, and is subject to more regulation.

And, before people go into the adults vs minors thing, note that the OP is the parent of one of the kids. He was caught unaware by this, which would suggest the school DID NOT CONSULT WITH NOR INFORM THE PARENTS.

Are we all cool with that concept? Really?
 
What part of "child" have we seemed to have forgotten?

The kind of shenanigans/behavior now accepted as kids-will-be-kids would never have been dreamed of/much tolerated during my own (and many others on this forum) HS days. Given the kids have apparently demonstrated no self-control, it must necessarily be imposed externally.

Respect is earned, not given away in Cracker Jack boxes to make someone "feel good"

Xin Loi.

Hmmm. HS kids. Being children. I think there's a useful distinction between a 16 year old and a 6 year. Both children, technically, but a 16 year old has a more defined sense of right and wrong for example

In HS, some of 'em are 18. And almost any of 'em would be tried as an adult. A fair number of them drive. A few states in the US will let a 17 year old vote under the right circumstances. If there was a draft on an 18 year old would be in the Army, so an 18 year old as a child- depends on things like when their birthdays fall and if they got held back once, but some kids in HS are 18....but let me reply to some of your questions:

The kind of shenanigans/behavior now accepted as kids-will-be-kids would never have been dreamed of/much tolerated during my own (and many others on this forum) HS days

Really? Accepted shenanigans/behavior? Accepted by whom? Well, "back in the day" in the US, kids were smoking in student designated smoking areas. Now a kid can't play a prank like letting off a stink bomb without a school going into lockdown. Picking on a classmate a little? Watch out for 'bully laws'. Are you sure your reception is static-free on the shenanigans/behavior now vs. then picture? Because I think you're forgetting some things about what was done as 'normal activity'. In 1972, if you were 18 in MA, you could buy alcohol legally. Try drawing a gun as a child in a school today. Hoo-WHEEEE

Given the kids have apparently demonstrated no self-control, it must necessarily be imposed externally.

If children 'back in the day' did have self control, and now they 'apparently don't', what changed? Children? Or parenting? In my opinion, now that the former inmates run the asylum, parents do a poor job- in general, on average, not in each case- of controlling their kids. Bluntly, parents are supposed to treat their kids like little adults and reason with them to cease bad behavior, because it was 'bad' to punish traditionally. that's the fashion now- no repercussions for bad behavior. How's that working? ;) Now, I don't think kids should be beaten with a hairbrush until the lacquer is gone, but kids are selfish. That's the way they are. They may be good kids but they are essentially selfish. My my my, want want want, me me me. And if the parent goes around saying "NObody is going to punish MY child in THAT way" the kids learns he/she can get away with things. And if the parent doesn't discipline the child, all bets are off. I don't feel it's kids' fault that they act like kids. I feel it's parents' faults that their children act like little jerks.

Respect is earned, not given away in Cracker Jack boxes to make someone "feel good"

Not an issue of respect. It is not 'disrespectful' to have a blanket policy that requires a breath-test- it is applied to everyone. However, there is an element of assuming kids are in the wrong that in my opinion is probably a bad idea. Eventually, resentment is the only outcome, and what happens on all those other nights there isn't a school dance? But I do feel your comment about "Cracker Jack boxes to make someone "feel good" " is appropriate- it makes the school feel good, and probably makes some parents feel good. I also don't see where a mutual respect comes into play except the standard respect that a 'child' can expect from a school

But logically, these kids are not distilling their own whisky in the backyard or brewing beer in the tub- it comes from somewhere.

Sounds like a band-aid on a sucking chest wound to me.
 
My 17 year old son and I was talking last night and he said that everyone entering the high school for the homecoming dance was required to take a Breathalyer test. Well I laughed and said, "we'll get you high school kids straightened out yet." Obviously I thought he was kidding. Soon into our conversation I realized he was telling the truth, they really did have to take a breath test to enter the highschool dance.

Now I'm no lawyer or law expert by any means but this sounds like a civil rights violation to me. What next, urine sample for drugs? Blood Test for the Aids virus or hepititis?

I would love to hear your guys take on this?

What is the penalty for getting caught? If it's just turned away from the dance (and maybe "call you a cab to take you home" if they are *really* drunk) I don't have a problem with it. If they turn them over to the cops, I have a problem with it.

I have a big problem with schools using their loco parentis status to search lockers etc, and then prosecute if they find something illegal. Or when they consent on the kids' behalf for the cops to perform a search that should require a search warrant, etc. Loco parentis is supposed to protect the kid's interest, not the school's.
 
MLeake said:
folks seem to think breathalzying every kid that goes to a school function is not only acceptable but laudable

In the current environment, it may be. If the schools could, or parents would, supply a little discipline, the guilty might be appropriately punished for their misbehavior. Without such efforts, the only way to deal with misbehavior is either on a preventative basis - and that is the very regrettable genesis of the current focus of presuming guilt until innocence is proven - or through gross over-reaction by calling in the police.
 
So, basically a lot of people are in fact saying they want government to treat people as needing to prove themselves innocent in order to enjoy privileges, but want government to remember it works the other way when it comes to a right... even though SCOTUS has allowed, thus far, that some regulation of rights is ok...
 
Back
Top