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Judge blocks welare drug testing

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lartinos

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ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- A federal judge temporarily blocked Florida's new law that requires welfare applicants to pass a drug test before receiving benefits on Monday, saying it may violate the Constitution's ban on unreasonable searches and seizures.

Judge Mary Scriven ruled in response to a lawsuit filed on behalf of a 35-year-old Navy veteran and single father who sought the benefits while finishing his college degree, but refused to take the test. The judge said there was a good chance plaintiff Luis Lebron would succeed in his challenge to the law based on the Fourth Amendment, which protects individuals from being unfairly searched.

The drug test can reveal a host of private medical facts about the individual, Scriven wrote, adding that she found it "troubling" that the drug tests are not kept confidential like medical records. The results can also be shared with law enforcement officers and a drug abuse hotline.

"This potential interception of positive drug tests by law enforcement implicates a `far more substantial' invasion of privacy than in ordinary civil drug testing cases," said Scriven, who was appointed by President George W. Bush.

The judge also said Florida didn't show that the drug testing program meets criteria for exceptions to the Fourth Amendment.

The injunction will stay in place until the judge can hold a full hearing on the matter. She didn't say when that hearing will be scheduled.

More than two-dozen states have also proposed drug-testing recipients of welfare or other government assistance, but Florida was the first state to enact such a law in more than a decade. Should any of those states pass a law and face a court challenge, Scriven's ultimate ruling would likely serve as a legal precedent.

The law's proponents include Gov. Rick Scott, who said during his campaign the measure would save $77 million. It's unclear how he arrived at those figures. A spokesman for the Florida Department of Children and Families deferred all comments to the governor's office.

"Drug testing welfare recipients is just a common-sense way to ensure that welfare dollars are used to help children and get parents back to work," said Jackie Schutz, a spokeswoman for Scott. "The governor obviously disagrees with the decision and he will evaluate his options regarding when to appeal."

Earlier this year, Scott also ordered drug testing of new state workers and spot checks of existing state employees under him. But testing was suspended after the American Civil Liberties Union also challenged that policy in a separate lawsuit.

Nearly 1,600 applicants have refused to take the test since testing began in mid-July, but they aren't required to say why. Thirty-two applicants failed the test and more than 7,000 have passed, according to the Department of Children and Families. The majority of positives were for marijuana.

State officials said Monday that applicants previously denied benefits for testing positive or refusing the test could reapply immediately. The Department of Children and Families will also approve all pending applications that await drug test results.

Supporters had argued applicants skipped the test because they knew they would have tested positive for drugs. Applicants must pay $25 to $35 for the test and are reimbursed by the state if they pass. It's unclear if the state has saved money.

Under the Temporary Assistance For Needy Families program, the state gives $180 a month for one person or $364 for a family of four.

Those who test positive for drugs are ineligible for the cash assistance for one year, though passing a drug course can cut that period in half. If they fail a second time, they are ineligible for three years.

Lebron, who is the sole caretaker of his 4-year-old son, said he's "happy that the judge stood up for me and my rights and said the state can't act without a reason or suspicion."

The ACLU says Florida was the first to enact such a law since Michigan tried more than a decade ago. Michigan's random drug testing program for welfare recipients lasted five weeks in 1999 before it was halted by a judge, kicking off a four-year legal battle that ended with an appeals court ruling it unconstitutional.
 
ok so, your employer can make you take a drug test to get/keep you job but the goverment can't make you take one to get/keep your public assistance? hmmmm, ok, how about this? make the motherfuckers work for their check, then we can drug test them because they are employees rather than fucking lazy cocksucking bums????
 
ok so, your employer can make you take a drug test to get/keep you job but the goverment can't make you take one to get/keep your public assistance? hmmmm, ok, how about this? make the motherfuckers work for their check, then we can drug test them because they are employees rather than fucking lazy cocksucking bums????

Pretty much man..
 
ok so, your employer can make you take a drug test to get/keep you job but the goverment can't make you take one to get/keep your public assistance? hmmmm, ok, how about this? make the motherfuckers work for their check, then we can drug test them because they are employees rather than fucking lazy cocksucking bums????
Similar to being a job creator, but on the opposite spectrum.



Droid Bionic EF app
 
Why the fuck are all of us working!!!!!
We could be getting high and getting paid. Taking that welfare money and buying bulk heroin and getting high and selling to kids!!! Yes..
 
Unreal, the liberal government has created the lower income class by offering more money in public assistance and free insurance than they can make working. The liberals are destroying this country and yet while senior citizens do not get a social security cost of living raises the welfare recipients, can rest assured their checks are always on time and get more benefits than all of us. I love the one about if an illegal immigrant has a child on american soil , they are automatically entitled to government assistance. Lets keep paying our 36% to 40 % income taxes to pay for all of this.
 
I don't like it. Hard drugs are out of your system in days. This is only going to catch pot foggers anyway. I don't see how even if they pay for their own test how this will save any money, a lab still has to test it. Heroin is out of your system in what? Three days? I see this encouraging people to move to harder drugs since marijuana is the one that stays in your system so long.
 
why can't the ensure confidentiality? That one was easy to call as soon as people figured out that any medical condition picked up by the test could potentially be up for public scrutiny. And I kind of have to agree, what if you could research someone you didn't like and find that 10 years ago they collected unemployment and they have teh AIDS. If the govt can't ensure confidentiality then just don't do it. Heck all of you piss and moan about the incompetence of the "gubment" all the time...why does this then surprise anyone when said incompetence is challenged in court?
 
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