SWS: 5 in 10 Filipinos approve mandatory drug tests in schools

The Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency suggested to make mandatory drug testing for teachers and students from Grade 4 and up.
STAR/Edd Gumban, File

MANILA, Philippines (Updated 9:56 a.m.) — The Social Weather Stations has released a survey on the previous proposal of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency to conduct mandatory drug testing for Grade 4 students and up—a proposal that was already dropped by the agency two months before the poll.

Back in July, Education Secretary Leonor Briones met with PDEA Director General Aaron Aquino and Dangerous Drugs Board Chairman Catalino Cuy to discuss the proposal.

Briones stood firm on her position that grade school students should not be subjected to mandatory drug testing as mandated by the anti-illegal drugs law.

The poll released Wednesday evening found that 51 percent of Filipinos (31 percent strongly agree, 20 percent somewhat agree) agree with the proposal.

Meanwhile, 36 percent disagree (24 percent strongly disagree, 12 percent somewhat disagree) while 13 percent are undecided on the matter.

This yields a "moderately strong" net agreement of +15, according to the survey firm.

Net agreement was highest in the Visayas with a "very strong" +47, followed by Mindanao's "moderately strong" +25, Metro Manila's "moderately strong" +17 and balance Luzon's "neutral" -6.

64% of Filipinos satisfied with drug war

The survey also found that 76 percent of Filipinos are satisfied and 12 percent are dissatisfied with the administration's anti-illegal drugs campaign, yielding a net satisfaction rating of +64, which SWS classifies as "very good."

"This is 1 point below the very good +65 (78 percent satisfied, 13 percent dissatisfied) in June 2018, and is similar to the very good +64 (75 percent satisfied, 12 percent dissatisfied, correctly rounded) in March 2018," SWS said.

Net satisfaction rating on the administration's drug war was at its highest in December 2016 with an "excellent" +77. It reached its lowest rating in September 2017 with a "very good" +63.

SWS attributed the one-point drop in net satisfaction with the anti-illegal drug campaign in September to the decrease in support in Mindanao and Metro Manila.

Net satisfaction in Mindanao remains "excellent" with +70 despite the 14-point plunge from +84 in June.

In Metro Manila, net satisfaction on the drug campaign dropped from +67 in June to +55 in September, the lowest in the nation's capital since the survey was first fielded two years ago.

In balance Luzon, net satisfaction went up from +58 in June to +66 in September while the rating in the Visayas remained "very good" with +58.

The survey firm also noted that net satisfaction with the performance of President Rodrigo Duterte was higher among those satisfied with the campaign against illegal drugs, with a rating of +67, compared to +31 among those undecided and -4 among those dissatisfied with the campaign.

The survey was conducted from September 15 to 23 using face-to-face interviews among 1,500 adults nationwide with a sampling error margin of ±3 percent for national percentages and ±6 percent each for Metro Manila, Balance Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.

"The quarterly Social Weather Surveys on public satisfaction with the administration’s campaign against illegal drugs are not commissioned. They are done on SWS's own initiative and released as a public service," the SWS said.

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