Pensacola Catholic High School intends to be a drug free school. The possession or use of alcoholic beverages, tobacco or other illicit drugs is an illegal act which poses a serious threat to the health, safety, and well-being of students and staff. The school is committed to promoting and providing a drug-free academic environment for students. Therefore, alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs are prohibited on the school premises and at school-sponsored or school-related activities.

This program ensures:

  • All students enrolled at CHS will be tested under this program at the beginning of the school year. 
  • Thereafter, students may be tested, on a random basis, throughout the school year or may be tested if there is reasonable suspicion that a student has violated the terms or conditions of the Program. 
  • All students are subject to random testing throughout the school year. Since the selection is random, some students may be selected more than once during the school year and others may not be tested through the random selection.  
  • Random testing over the course of an academic year will comprise approximately 25% percent of the student population.

The goal of the program is to provide a strong deterrence for our youth to remain drug free and to ensure a safe, drug-free academic environment.

Frequently Asked Questions

1.    Could you list the drugs the students will be tested for? 

The drugs tested for in a standard test include: cocaine, marijuana, opiates (including heroin), OxyContin, Percocet, Vicodin (and similar prescription painkillers), methamphetamine, Ecstasy (MDMA), Eve (MDEA) and phencyclidine (PCP).   As tests for additional drugs become available, they will be added to our program.

2.    Do the drugs that will be tested for include steroids, alcohol, and nicotine?

No, it is impossible to test for steroids by this method because there are literally thousands of steroids, each of which requires a specific test in order to be detected.

Currently, the test does not test for alcohol. Traditionally alcohol testing has focused on identifying the alcohol itself, which can only be done within a few hours of ingestion.  The industry has been working to identify a metabolite of alcohol which will indicate past use.  Once such a metabolite is identified and its accuracy verified, we will be able to detect it in hair if the alcohol has been used within the past three months.

Nicotine is not currently included in the testing panel.  If a test for it becomes available, it will be added to the program.

3.    Are the faculty and staff of PCHS being tested in this program also?

No, this program will test students only for substance abuse.

4.    My child is on a prescription which I have been told will cause a positive test.   Should I send in a doctor’s prescription now, before the testing begins?

The recommended approach is not to collect prescription information in advance, since it can change over time.    If a test comes back as positive, the CHS administration will contact the parents who THEN should provide the administration with the written prescription, describing the drug prescribed and the dosage amount.    A professional pharmacologist then compares the drug test result to the prescription information to ensure that the test results are consistent with the drug prescribed and the dosage called for.   So, a student will never be penalized for a “positive” test if the drug that is picked up in the test is the same as that for which he/she has a valid prescription.

5.    Will second hand smoke cause a positive test result?

No, second hand smoke will not cause a positive test result.  We have established a cutoff level through scientific analysis and field studies, and this cutoff level has been determined to be accurate and reliable by the FDA.  If a student inhales environmental amounts of marijuana as second hand smoke, the quantities that are deposited in the hair will be well below the cutoff level, and the test will be reported as negative.