SAE Fraternity Enforces Drug Tests
by Ellison Langford / NEWS EDITOR
9 months ago | 3217 views | 5 5 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print


Sigma Alpha Epsilon is the first fraternity on Auburn’s campus, and the first SAE chapter in the nation, to require its members to undergo drug testing.

However, the fraternity is currently only testing officers, pledges and brothers who live in the house. But officials say it is working up to eventually testing all 120 members.

“It’s common knowledge for anybody’s who’s around college campuses that Auburn University has a drug and alcohol problem,” said chapter adviser Greg Smith. “And this is just one of the ways for us to say, ‘Hey, we’re gonna be part of the solution, not part of the problem.’”

The change began when Smith proposed the idea of drug testing the members to House Corporation. House Corp. is a group of fraternity alumni who own the chapter’s house and the property where it’s located.

House Corp. agreed it was a good idea and discussed it with the fraternity officers, who agreed to implement it within the chapter.

“I talked to the chapter and asked them how they felt about people being drug-tested,” said Sim Penton, chapter president. “And they said they were fine with it. We really kind of started it to fix the reputation, I guess.”

Brothers living in the house were informed before the beginning of the fall semester that they would be tested sometime during the semester. Men pledging the fraternity were also notified they would be tested.

Pledges were tested once during pledgeship and again before initiation. Brothers were given a few days notice before they were tested about a month ago.

The tests were administered by a company from Prattville. Penton said they were tested for “everything,” including marijuana and amphetamines.

Smith said he thinks it would be difficult for a brother to cheat the test by ingesting a substance to conceal any drugs in the system because that substance would also show up on the test.

All of the members passed.

However, in the case that a brother doesn’t pass, Smith said their punishment depends on their position.

Pledges who fail are removed from the pledge class. Officers who fail are removed from office and elections are held to replace them. Brothers living in the house who fail are evicted until they attend an assessment session with the University Health Behavior Assessment Center and then pass another drug test, Smith said.

However, the new policy doesn’t seem to have deterred many potential members.

“I thought it would change it a lot more than it has,” Penton said.

Penton also said the fraternity has received a lot of encouragement from the national organization, as well as the parents of potential pledges.

“(We started drug testing) basically because we knew fraternities and kids at Auburn and just because we’ve been where fraternities have a drug problem,” said Matthew Murphy, a member of House Corp. “And we knew it would be a good way to rid our fraternity of the drug problem and hopefully try to influence more fraternities down the road to do it.”

Murphy said he had even tried to implement drug testing while he was president of SAE during his time at Auburn, but said the amount of obstacles hindered him.

Murphy said not only is drug-testing expensive, but there is also the legal issue of making sure everyone has provided consent. And for anyone under 19, the fraternity needed parental consent.

Penton said he feels good about the caliber of man this change will attract to the fraternity. And while he agreed drugs may have been a problem, Penton said he thought people exaggerated the severity.

Murphy said he thinks the change will help the brothers to be better fraternity members and to take better care of the house. Murphy said the insurance policy will be renewed next year, and he hopes drug-testing will be a factor that lowers the cost of insurance.

“We didn’t do this really thinking we were gonna catch a lot of people,” Smith said. “I think we want to set the example that the Greek system needs to be drug free.”
comments (5)
« The Truth wrote on Thursday, Feb 18 at 08:16 PM »
“I talked to the chapter and asked them how they felt about people being drug-tested,” said Sim Penton, chapter president. “And they said they were fine with it. We really kind of started it to fix the reputation, I guess.”

So you kind of started it, you guess... Even the president doesn't buy into this.

As many times as I sat in chapter and listened to people bitch about being drug tested, I know this is not even remotely true. Drug testing people isn't going to fix the problem, because there isn't a "PROBLEM". Need I remind you this is college, and drugs are going to be a part of it. After my second year in the fraternity and the next set of officers took over, the place slowly went to shit. I think the state of the fraternity and where it stands is a 100% reflection of the leadership. If you go an elect a complete pushover as president and nobody takes him seriously, then yes there will be problems because nobody will listen.

As soon as the fraternity stops dividing into clicks and the majority click (a bunch of fags) ends up deciding who the president/leadership is (leaders of the fag pack), then there will be no problem.

Take a hike Greg Smith.

« some dude wrote on Thursday, Feb 18 at 11:03 AM »
Dyer,

That is probably the greatest thing ive heard. Ive been dealing with that dude for three years, and you hit the nail on the head. Cant wait for next football season.

War Eagle
« Michael Dyer wrote on Thursday, Feb 18 at 10:04 AM »
You all should have a chance to meet this greg smith character. Local 'christian life counselor' who swears like a sailor every chance he gets. He's the biggest hypocrite i met during my time at auburn. Spends his wednesday nights at SAE chapters cussing out the members and getting way too involved in the lives of college kids. Sae had no more of a problem than ka, sigma nu, sigma chi, phi delta theta, pike, or any of the other big fraternities do. Has weekly meetings with pledges in his 'christian office' where he drops 'f bombs' and 'GD' like its part of his profession. The National SAE office needs their new goal to get that joker to focus his life elsewhere and leave the college boys alone. It is creepy and borderline dangerous to have a guy like him hanging out a fraternity house as much as he does. War Eagle.
« atlanta-AU-Greek wrote on Wednesday, Dec 09 at 09:29 AM »
To Anon5,

I don't believe Greg Smith's omment indicated that JUST Auburn has a problem. Re-read the comment, and I think you will understand the comment is saying college campuses have this problem, and yes, Auburn specifically has this problem as well.

I don't believe AU's problem is as severe as some other schools in the surrounding region and certainly not at a bad as some other US colleges & universities.

« anon5 wrote on Thursday, Nov 19 at 08:34 AM »
It’s common knowledge for anybody’s who’s around college campuses that Auburn University has a drug and alcohol problem,” said chapter adviser Greg Smith

....funny I've never thought that just Auburn had this problem, I think you need to check out every other college in US and then compare Auburn. Or maybe it's just simply the crowd that you are around that seems to have the problem.