L 1 NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily -Thursday, September 19, 1996"- 5A M4ore companies testing for drug use t Washington Post WASHINGTON - The sign taped to the front window of the Home Depot in suburban Alexandria, Va., delivers a warding to job-seekers. "We test all applicants for illegal drugs," the plac- ard reads in bold orange letters. "If you use drugs, don't bother to apply." Home Depot tests every one of its more than 90,000 employees nation- *de for drug use - from its CEO down to the clerk who helps customers select nails and lumber - before they are hired or promoted. Prospective employees who test positive for illegal substances are turned away; employees who test positive are fired. Ten years ago, that kind of systemat- ic testing was virtually unheard-of in the private sector. Today, experts say, it the norm. The number of major U.S. corpora- tions that use drug testing has risen 277 percent since widespread testing began in 1987, according to a nationwide sur- vey. Most of the boom occurred from 1988 to 1993, as federal regulations mandated testing for a growing list of professions, but the ranks of employees being tested continue to grow. Drug-testing experts estimate that one-third of all new U.S. hires will be eeried this year, more than ever "fore. If on-the-job screening is included, as many as 30 million U.S. workers are subject to testing annually. And with public concern growing about" rising illegal drug use among young people, testing is likely to become even more common. "The number of people being tested has exponentially increased," said Eric Oreenberg, director of management udies for the American Management Association, which represents 9,000 companies that employ 25 percent of the U.S. work force and has been study- ing oo-the-job drug testing since 1987. "What was once very, very rare has become routine. It's now a normal cor- porate procedure." Federal regulations mandate testing of about 8.5 million workers, including many who work for government con- actors or in jobs where safety is an ue.. Many corporate officials say required drug testing helps them attract better applicants and cuts down on workplace accidents, workers compen- sation claims and sick days. Ninety-eight percent of Fortune 200 companies use drug tests to screen potential employees. govt. reports child abuse sing in U.S. cities Washington Post - WASHINGTON -The federal gov- ernment yesterday reported an alarm- ing increase in the incidence of child abuse and neglect in this country, rely- ing on a comprehensive study designed to go beyond the number of officially reported cases in measuring one of the nation's most severe social problems. The study, released ,by the 'partment of Health and Human rvices, indicated that the number of child ause and neglect cases rose from an estimated 1.4 million cases in 1986 to an estimated 2.8 million cases in 1993. Over the same period, the study estimated that the number of children who were seriously injured as a result of maltreatment climbed from 143,000 to nearly 570,000. But as the incidence of abuse and neglect rose dramatically, the number cases investigated by state agencies remained about the same, according to the National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect. As a result, the pro- portion of cases that were investigated declined from 44 percent in 1986 to 28 percent in 1993. The numbers offer a stark reminder of the scope of a problem that experts say has risen as a result of poverty and drug W among young families with chil- n. It is an issue that has gained noto- riety across the country with the deaths of children at the hands of their parents. And as the problem has increased, many state and local child-protection agencies have become mired in serious problems of poor management: nearly Perry takes personal responsibility for inattention in Gulf A Burned up AP PHOTO A group of rioters uses a bumt-out car to block a street in the small town of Facatativa, Colombia, about 18 miles from Bogota, yesterday. The residents were protesting a sharp recent rise in electricity rates. City acued of targeting Hispanics with zoning rl The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Defense Secretary William Perry took personal responsibility yesterday for the leader- ship failures that left a U.S. military housing complex in Saudi Arabia vul- nerable to terrorist attack in June. In emotional testimony before the House and Senate, Perry acknowledged neglecting to issue firm instructions for protecting forces there, tolerating unclear lines of command and lacking focus in budgeting for measures to safeguard troops. Defending the four-star military offi- cers in the line of command between him and the housing complex in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, where 19 U.S. airmen died from a truck-bomb explo- sion, Perry praised Gen. John Shalikashvili, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and Gen. J.H. Binford Peay, commander of U.S. operations in the Middle East, as superb soldiers and strong leaders. "To whatever extent they're responsi- ble for this tragedy, then so am 1, for I supported them for their positions, and I still do," Perry said, his voice quaver- ing. "I will not seek to 'delegate the responsibility for this tragedy on any of my military commanders. ... To the extent this tragedy resulted in the fail- ure of leadership, that responsibility is mine and mine alone." The secretary spoke from a hand- written text an aide said Perry penned at home Tuesday night. The mea culpa appeared to mute some criticism by House and Senate panels gathered to review the findings, released this week, of a Pentagdn task force that faulted the entire command structure for paying insufficient attention to terrorist threats in Saudi Arabia. Perry gave no indication he intends to resign over the bombing, and no law- maker suggested yesterday he should. Nonetheless, some members took Perry to task for not moving earlier to adopt the kind of organizational and funding changes he announced this week to bet- ter protect U.S. forces against terrorist attack. "Our past history includes terrorist attacks against U.S. military forces sta- tioned in Europe and in- the Middle East, said Sen. Strom Thurmond (R- S.C.) chair of the Armed Services Committee. "Average Americans would think that we had learned something: from these incidents about protecting our forces and progressed beyond the point at which we find ourselves today." Several House members also voiced concern that the three-star Air Force officer now charged with ,determining, whether any disciplinary action is war- ranted lacks sufficient authority to rec- ommend punishment against higher- ranking commanders or senior Defense Department civilians. Perry sought to assure members the judicial inquiry "could reach out in any direction-up, down or sideways." But Rep. Curt Weldon (R-Pa.) suggested the House National Security Committee,,- conduct its own probe into culpability. And Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) took particular exception to Perry's defense of Peay, insisting the head of. the U.S. Central Command be held accountable for never questioning the proximity of a perimeter fence to the apartment building whose face was torn away by the bomb blast. The truck- bomb was positioned just outside the fence in a public parking lot. WAUKEGAN, Ill. (AP) - Like the Slavic, Lithuanian and Armenian immi- grants before them, many Hispanic families arriving in Waukegan double up on living arrangements until they get on their feet. A sister lives in the base- ment with her kids, or Grandma stays home to baby sit while the parents work. Upstairs rooms are rented out to help make ends meet. "Overcrowding!" the city of Waukegan declared. "Five cars in the driveway, cots in the basement, how are you going to get them out in a fire?" Alderman Lawrence TenPas said. "There's been horrendous neighbor- hood deterioration," said Newton Finn, a lawyer and Baptist minister. The solution, as the city saw it, was to outlaw extended-family living arrangements beyond parents, children and two additional relatives. But the U.S. Justice Department con- tends that the rule was enacted to limit the number of Hispanics living in the city and that the ordinance has been more strictly enforced against minori- ties. "City officials repeatedly have expressed their animosity toward the new Hispanic residents of Waukegan and declared that they intended to pre- vent Hispanics from 'taking over;" the Justice Department said in a complaint filed against the city last month. Great Weeeend Bsc4 as for as low apes $109 from MasterCard and United Airlines!1 \ a1 1 --- Take Off For The Weekend With United Airlines And Return Monday Or Thesday To Get Substantial Savings When You Use Your MasterCard® Card. Weekender a aPromo Code: AV0096 Ticket Designator: AV0096 Use your MasterCard* Card Travel Complete: May 15,1997 For Great Savings On United Airlines. ory~ r~e rfS i lli Roundtrip' Rates Within Zone A or B s 129 Carrier: United Airlines/Shuttle by United/United Express only not be sold, bartered or purchased. Routing: Roundtrip or Open Jaw within the 48 contiguous United States, Ticketing Restrictions: Non-refundable. Nontransferable after ticketing. 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