“But if we’re going to attempt to actually make a difference, we need to know who those using or supplying the heroin at school functions are, and this is one way to do that,” Kleefisch said.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2002 that randomly drug testing students who are participating in voluntary, competitive activities is legal and does not violate the Fourth Amendment.

About one-third of the Coalition to Combat Heroin committee members are from Oconomowoc, where the School Board approved a policy last year that would require students in middle and high school to consent to random drug testing in order to participate in extracurricular activities.

The policy was championed by district parents whose children died of heroin overdoses.

Rep. Cindi Duchow, R-Delafield, and Sen.-elect LaTonya Johnson, D-Milwaukee, said at the committee meeting the bill could have unintended consequences on students’ emotional states.

“I don’t think our kids need to be treated like criminals,” Duchow said.

The cost of Kleefisch’s pending proposal and how it would be paid for is undetermined. His office declined to release a draft of the bill.

– Kenosha News journalist Daniel Gaitan contributed to this report

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