The school system is not a legal setting.
Their rules are only rules, not law.
A school enforcing rules outside of the classroom is something like a business firing people because they're not religious (or because they are religious).
Could you explain your analogy further because it doesn't make much sense to me right now.
Also, don't schools enforce drug-free zones and keeping weapons off of school grounds? Those are just a bit more than just school rules, IIRC.
Really, I don't see why so many people have a problem with this; schools do drug testing (at least mine did once in a while). However, once they start testing for alcohol, it's a bad thing.
I, for one, am not in agreeance with that. I mean, I don't think that it should be administered. Unless a kid stumbles into school drunk, it's not the school's buisness. I mean, it said it can even detect soap, or communian.
. . . They would need a warrent to search any other part of our body, why is the excroment different?
Greg Skipper in the article is very critical of just using this test. If there is a positive, he believes there needs to be something else.
Also, I imagine excrements from our body are a bit like garbage. Police are allowed to search your garbage without a warrant.