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Special Report - Steroid Abuse
06/27/08 - 12:26 PM
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Stephen Gunter - bio
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Bay County, Fla:

High school athletics, a time of teamwork, camaraderie, growing and an increased level of competition, with competition comes a will to win, and for some athletes at any cost.

Players are willing to give their bodies any substance as long as it will increase their productivity on the playing field.

Enter high school anabolic steroid testing programs.

This previous school year, the Florida High School Athletic Association tested one percent of student athletes in the entire state in six sports; football, girls flag football, baseball, softball, and girls and boys weightlifting.

After approximately 600 random testings, only one positive reading came back.

Heading into the 08-09 school year, this program will no longer be funded due to budget crunches, so looking back on this program which cost 100-thousand dollars to fund, was it worth it?

“Yeah, I think it was worth it. Any time you can get people to deter people from doing things that are illegal or trying to take advantage of a sport, I think that’s very worthwhile,” said Bay High School Athletic Director Glenn Manley.

“What I think you have to look at, is look at the 600 that were tested, and now we are reassured that there is not a problem as a whole scale perhaps as the general public may think in terms of this,” said Bay District Schools Superintendent James McCalister.

With only one positive test coming back from approximately 600 testings, what kind of impact does it create of that what kid being found?

“What I can tell you is that it was a success in us identifying one student, in now that we can provide help to that student if we had not done that, and there is no price tag that you can put on a human’s life when you come to a program such as this, but overall, if we save one life, I think the program was worth it,” said McCalister.

“I think it is good, and unfortunately one is bad. I think to find one in that many tests shows that it is probably working as a deterrent. Any time you can keep those kids from hurting themselves, that’s a great thing,” said Manley.

With the budget crunch we are in today, the reason for this program being discontinued was strictly due to lack of funding.

If in the near future funding once again becomes available for this or any statewide steroid testing policy, should it be put back into effect?

“I really think they should go ahead and get all sports in. They left wrestling off of there, and to me, that should have been on there, in my opinion. I think they should go ahead and try to get more,” said Manley.

“I think that if the funding is restored, then I think we need to restore the policy, and again, I would add, that I would like to see the sampling population, greater than the one percent,” stated McCalister.

The FHSAA doesn’t know if or when the program will be funded again, but the association feels that this past year’s program was a success because they can now help the one student who registered the positive reading.

No athlete from this area was selected for the random testing, but some counties do have a drug testing policy, Jackson County being one of those where students involved in any extracurricular activity may be subject to testing.

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