Joan E. Friedenberg v. School Board of Palm Beach County

911 F.3d 1084
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 2018
Docket17-12935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 911 F.3d 1084 (Joan E. Friedenberg v. School Board of Palm Beach County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joan E. Friedenberg v. School Board of Palm Beach County, 911 F.3d 1084 (11th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

MARCUS, Circuit Judge:

A suspicionless search by the government is presumptively unconstitutional. So goes the basic hornbook law of the Fourth Amendment. The details are a bit more complex. Suspicionless searches are permissible in a narrow band of cases where they serve sufficiently powerful and unique public needs. The force of these needs depends heavily on the context in which the search takes place.

At issue today is a matter of first impression-whether a county school board may require all applicants for substitute teacher positions to submit to and pass a drug test as a condition of employment. That is, to put it more directly, whether the Palm Beach County School Board (the "School Board") may, without any suspicion of wrongdoing, collect and search-by testing-the urine of all prospective substitute teachers. We think that the School Board has a sufficiently compelling interest in screening its prospective teachers to justify this invasion of the privacy rights of job applicants, and thus conclude that the School Board has not violated the constitutional mandate barring unreasonable searches and seizures. As we see it, ensuring the safety of millions of schoolchildren in the mandatory supervision and care of the state, and ensuring and impressing a drug-free environment in our classrooms, are compelling concerns. Because we recognize today a special need to conduct such testing, and because the balance of interests weighs heavily in its favor, we hold that the suspicionless testing of substitute teacher applicants in Palm Beach County is permissible and affirm the district court's denial of a preliminary injunction.

I.

A.

Joan Friedenberg applied for several advertised positions-tutor, substitute teacher, and early childhood aide-in the Palm Beach County School District. Among other things, the online application required Friedenberg to agree to be tested *1088 for drugs. In February 2017, Friedenberg received a conditional offer to become a substitute teacher. She was told, however, that she would need to be fingerprinted-for a full background check-and would need to pass a drug test before she could be officially hired. Friedenberg was fingerprinted but refused to submit to drug testing.

Since our constitutional analysis depends in substantial measure on the specific facts and the unique circumstances found in our public schools, we are obliged to examine closely the testing protocol adopted by the School District, the efficacy of the testing regime, and the duties and responsibilities of substitute public school teachers. The drug testing was required under the School District's "Drug and Alcohol-Free Workplace" policy, which provides for drug testing to be performed in conformity with Florida's Administrative Code. See Fla. Admin Code. R. 59A-24.005(3). The policy required, among other things, pre-employment drug testing of all job applicants. The relevant provision read this way:

Pre-employment screening will be required of all applicants before employment with the District. Any applicant who tests positive in the pre-employment screening for a drug as defined in this Policy will not be hired and is not eligible to re-apply for employment with the District for one year following the confirmed positive test.

The School District has a separate policy requiring suspicionless drug testing of those employees and volunteers who perform "safety-sensitive functions," mostly involving the operation of commercial vehicles. 1

Under the pre-employment drug-testing policy, the applicant typically provides a urine sample in the privacy of a bathroom stall. Fla. Admin Code. R. 59A-24.005(3). While the applicant provides the sample, collection site staff remain in the room, but outside the stall. Fla. Admin Code. R. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(7). Before collection, applicants are asked to wash their hands, empty their pockets, remove outer clothing, and place all personal belongings aside. Fla. Admin Code. R. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(5)-(6). A wallet may be kept, but staff may search it for contaminants. Fla. Admin Code. R. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(5). After collection, the testing staff observe the urine sample for evidence of tampering. Fla. Admin Code. R. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(12). If tampering is suspected, a supervisor may approve collection of a second sample under direct observation by a person of the same gender as the applicant. Fla. Admin Code. R. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(13). Drug-tested applicants are also required to disclose all medications they are taking before being tested.

Select information from the drug testing is reported to the School Board. Among other things, positive test results, including the substance or substances for which the specimen tested positive, are reported. The reports also indicate whether an individual refused testing or left the testing site. Five individuals within the School Board's Department of Risk and Benefits Management receive this information. The results are held in a "confidential electronic medical folder" and are not reported to any law enforcement official. The hiring school site or department is informed only *1089 that the applicant did not pass a medical examination. Moreover, self-disclosed information about medications is seen only by the collection staff and a review officer-a position the District outsources.

Testing under this policy has revealed relatively few positive results. In 2016, 4,965 job applicants were subject to the District's pre-employment screening. Of that total, forty individuals were disqualified by testing positive or failing to submit to the drug test. The disqualifications included thirty-three positive tests and seven individuals who refused to take the test or left the testing site. That is, of 4,958 job applicants who submitted to drug testing, 0.67 percent tested positive. Twenty-seven of the thirty-three positive tests were positive for marijuana; three more were positive for benzodiazepines (antianxiety drugs), two for cocaine, and one for opiates.

Among the forty job applicants disqualified by the drug testing regime were twenty-five applicants for noninstructional roles and fifteen applicants for instructional roles, including six substitute teacher applicants. Of the six disqualified substitute teacher applicants, four tested positive for marijuana, one tested positive for cocaine, and one refused to take the test. Eleven of the forty disqualified applicants began work with the District and worked for some time before the results of the drug test disqualified them, including three teachers and a coach. Notably, the record does not reflect how many applicants for substitute teachers-or how many applicants for instructional positions-were tested of the total number of job applicants tested during the 2016 year. Nor is there any empirical data addressing how many would-be applicants for instructional positions were deterred by the County's drug-testing regime.

The typical workday of a substitute teacher in the School District includes five to six hours of classroom time, generally alone with students. Before the school day, substitute teachers check in and are seen by others, such as a school principal, in the school office; they also check out at the office at the end of the day.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
911 F.3d 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joan-e-friedenberg-v-school-board-of-palm-beach-county-ca11-2018.