[T1] In аn effort to address a perceived drug and alcohol problem among its students, Goshen County School District No. 1 adopted a policy requiring all students who participate in extracurricular activities to consent to random testing for alcohol and drugs. Appellants initiated litigation, claiming that the Policy is unconstitutional. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the School District. Appellants challenge that decision in this appeal. We affirm.
ISSUES
[T2] These issues were raised by the Appellants and adopted by the Appellees:
1. Whether the district court erred in refusing to declare that the District's "Mandatory Drug Testing for Students Involved in Extracurricular Activities" violates [the prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures of] Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution.
2. Whether the district court erred in refusing to declare that the District's Drug Testing Policy violates Article 1, §§ 2 and 3 of the Wyoming Constitution, and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
3. Whether the district court erred in refusing to declare that the District's Drug Testing Policy violates Article 1, § 6 of the Wyoming Constitution, and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
4. Whether the district court erred in refusing to enjoin the District from implementing the Drug Testing Policy.
5. Whether the district court erred in granting the District's Motion for Summary Judgment.
FACTS
[T3] For the past several years, Goshen County School District No. 1 has participated in surveys of its students, known as the "Wyoming Youth Risk Surveys." According to the affidavit of the School District's Superintendent, the surveys revealed "a serious prevalence of alcohol and drug use among Goshen County School District No. 1 students. Goshen County has ranged at or near the top for alcohol and drug use for several of those surveys." The School District participated in another statewide survey in 2008, the "Wyoming Prevention Needs Assessment State Profile Report." This survey indicated that:
[In 2008 26% of our sixth graders had used alcohol at some point, 10% had used cigarettes; and 6% inhalants, with 4% of the sixth graders having used inhalants within the past 30 days; 8% of our sixth graders reported binge drinking; 38% of Goshen County eighth graders were perceived to be at risk [of] harm [from] druguse; 41% of tenth grade students were perceived to be at risk [of] harm [from] drug use; 47% had friends who use drugs; ... 44% were deemed to have favorable attitudes toward, drug use; 52% of twelfth grade students were at risk [of] harm [from] drug use; 40% expressed an intent to use; 48% had friends who used drugs; ... 50% were classified as at risk for early initiation of drug use.
Concern over the pervasiveness of drug and aleohol use among its students prompted the School District to hold a public forum on February 2, 2009, to discuss the possibility of requiring students to take random drug and alcohol tests. Following that forum, on April 14, 2009, the School District's Board of Trustees adopted a new policy requiring all students in grades 7 through 12 who participate in extracurricular activities to consent to random testing for drugs and alcohol. According to the School District's Superintendent:
The policy recognizes that many of the students participating in extracurricular activities are viewed as role models to other students and that it is important that they avoid drug and alcohol use in their position as role models. It is also the position of the Board that to achieve the goal of reducing risks of alcohol and drug abuse and to maximize the skills and talents participating in extracurricular activities, it is important that participants refrain from drug and aleohol use. It is the belief of our school district that this policy will assist in that endeavor.
Testing is done chiefly through urinalysis, although testing may also be done with saliva or breath samples.
[T4] Appellants, referred to collectively as the Coalition, are a group of students and their parents or guardians 1 who filed a declaratory judgment action in district court seeking to have the School District's Policy declared unconstitutional. After briefing and argument, the district court concluded that the drug testing program did not violate either the Wyoming Constitution or the United States Constitution. It granted summary judgment in favor of the School District, and the Coalition appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[¥5] We review a district court's decision granting summary judgment using this standard of review:
Summary judgment is appropriate when there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. W.R.C.P. 56(c); Metz Beverage Co. v. Wyoming Beverages, Inc.,2002 WY 21 , ¶ 9,39 P.3d 1051 , 1055 (Wyo.2002). "A genuine issue of material fact exists when a disputed fact, if it were proven, would establish or refute an essential element of a cause of action or a defense that the parties have asserted." Id. Because summary judgment involves a purely legal determination, we undertake de novo review of a trial court's summary judgment decision. Glenn v. Union Pacific R.R. Co.,2008 WY 16 , ¶ 6,176 P.3d 640 , 642 (Wyo.2008).
Jacobs Ranch Coal Co. v. Thunder Basin Coal Co., LLC,
DISCUSSION
Search and Seizure
[16] The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution prohibit unreasonable searches and seizures. See Pena v. State,
[17] The Coalition concedes that the Policy does not violate the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. It contends, however, that Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution provides greater protections, under the facts of this case, than those afforded by the Fourth Amendment. In support of this contention, the Coalition relies heavily on Vasquez v. State,
[18] In O'Boyle we observed that, "[in the specific context presented in Vasquez, Le. a vehicle search incident to an arrest, we said Wyoming's search and seizure provision provided greater protection than the federal provision" because the Wyoming Constitution "requires that searches and seizures be reasonable under all the cireumstances." Id., T1 30-31, 117 P.8d at 410. We then extended the same "reasonable under all the cireum-stances" analysis to a traffic stop and detention, and concluded that Mr. O'Boyle's lengthy detention and "extensive questioning" were unreasonable under the cireum-stances, and therefore contrary to Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution. Id., T 32, 117 P.8d at 410-11.
[T9] Both Vasquee and O'Boyle dealt with searches by police in the criminal law context. We have never before considered what limitations the Wyoming Constitution may place, in the context of an administrative search, on a school's testing of students for alcohol and drugs. This "is a matter of first impression in Wyoming, so we therefore look to other jurisdictions for guidance." Hofstad v. Christie,
[110] In Vernonia School Dist. 47J v. Acton,
[111] Seven years later, the Court decided Board of Education of Independent School Dist. No. 92 of Pottawatomie County v. Earls,
[112] In addition to Vernonia and Earls, we have reviewed decisions from several state courts. The majority of such cases have applied some version of the reasonableness test, and concluded that random, suspi-cionless drug testing of students involved in extracurricular activities did not violate the provisions of their respective state constitutions. In Joye v. Hunterdon Central Regional High School Board of Education,
[113] The Coalition cites York v. Wahkiakum School Dist. No. 200,
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
The court noted that, under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, "the ultimate measure of the constitutionality of a governmental search is 'reasonableness,'" id. at 305-06, 178 P.38d at 1001, citing Vernonia,
[T14] Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution is much more similar to the language of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Our state constitution reads as follows:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated, and no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by affidavit, particularly describing the place to be searched or the person or thing to be seized.
Given the significant difference between the text of Article I, § 7 of the Washington Constitution and the language of Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution, York provides little guidance in resolving the issue before us.
[115] The Coalition also claims that "the Pennsylvania Supreme Court struck down a drug testing policy as violative of the Pennsylvania Constitution," citing Theodore v. Delaware Valley School Dist.,
It may be that, upon the trial of the matter, the [School] District can produce evidence of an existing drug problem as well as the success and/or failure of other means adopted to eradicate the problem, along the lines of that which ultimately convinced a majority of the New Jersey Supreme Court [in Joye,176 N.J. 568 ,826 A.2d 624 ].
Id. at 852,
[T16]) Although the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was critical of certain aspects of the United States Supreme Court's decision in Earls, it agreed that the basic test of the constitutionality of a search under the Pennsylvаnia Constitution is the "reasonableness" of that search. Theodore,
[117] This unifying theme is consistent with our decisions in Vasquee and O'Boyle, where we stated that Article 1,.§ 4 of the Wyoming Constitution requires that searches be "reasonable under all of the circumstances." Vasquez,
[118] Another common feature of the cases upholding the constitutionality of such searches is the list of factors considered to determine reasonableness. - In Vernoniq, these factors were stated as: (1) "the nature of the privacy interest upon which the search here at issue intrudes,"
[119] This list of factors is also consistent with Wyoming precedent. We have explained that the reasonableness of a search
is not capable of precise definition or any mechanical application. Each case requires a weighing of the need for the particular search in the public interest against the invasion of the personal rights that the search calls for. Courts must probe the scope of the particular intrusion, the manner in which it is carried on, the justification for its initiation, and the place in which it is conducted.
Jessee v. State,
[$20] The Coalition asserts that a "child, merely on account of his minority, is not beyond the protection of the Constitution," citing as authority ALJ,
[121] In ALJ, a minor -was adjudicated delinquent and placed on probation. ALJ,
[122] We agreed that urinalysis is a search for constitutional purposes, and that constitutional rights apply to juveniles. We said, however, that constitutional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures may apply differently to minors than to adults. Id. We recognized that, pursuant to Wyoming's Juvenile Justice Act, Wyo. Stat. § 14-6-229, a judge imposing probation on a minor
must do what is best suited for the public safety, the preservation of families, and the physical, mental, and moral welfare of the child.... To fulfill this mandate and to address the rehabilitative needs of juveniles, the court must have flexibility when it is formulating the probation conditions.
ALJ,
[T28]) The analysis in ALJ applies to the case before us now. We recognize that public school students in Wyoming are protected from unreasonable searches and seizures by Article 1, $ 4 of the Wyoming Constitution, but we also acknowledge that what is reasonable under all of the circumstances must be determined in light of factors such as the age of the students and the school environment. Wyoming school districts have a "compelling interest" in providing for the safety and welfare of their students. RM v. Washakie County School Dist. No. 1,
[124] The School District further points out that students participating in extracurricular activities are subject to rules and requirements not applicable to students in general. As set forth in the School District's Student Activity Code of Conduct: "Students who volunteer to participate in the Goshen County School District No. 1 extracurricular activities programs do so with the understanding that they must observe some regulations that are more restrictive than those relating to the general student community." These regulations vary according to the particular activity, but include requirements for medical releases and physical exams, academic standards, attendance rules, and compliance with specific rules pertaining to tobaceo, alcohol, controlled substances, and offensive conduct. Because students who participate in extracurricular activities are already regulated more strictly, their reasonable expectations of privacy are even more limited than those of the general student population. See Linkе,
[125] The School District's Policy specifies that students participating in extracurricular activities must consent to testing, chiefly through urinalysis, for drugs and alcohol. The Coalition correctly contends that urination is a bodily function traditionally shielded by privacy. See Horls,
[127] The School District's Policy is less intrusive than the one upheld by the United States Supreme Court in Vernonia, where male students were required to
produce samples at a urinal along a wall. They remain fully clothed and are only observed from behind, if at all. Female students produce samples in an enclosed stall, with a female monitor standing outside listening only for sounds of tampering. These conditions are nearly identical to those typically encountered in public restrooms, which men, women, and especially school children use daily. Under such conditions, the privacy interests compromised by the process of obtaining the urine sample are in our view negligible.
Vernonia,
[T28] We also note, briefly, that the School District's policy is less intrusive than the one accepted by the United States Supreme Court in Karls, where a monitor waited outside the bathroom stall and listened "for the normal sounds of urination in order to guard against tampered specimens."
[129] In the case before us now, the ree-ord includes evidence about the practices actually employed under the School District's Policy. Two students who were tested provided affidavits detailing their experiences. 3 The affiants said they felt embarrassed because monitoring personnel and the other students being tested could see them enter and exit the restroom. We do not find this to be an undue intrusion on the students legitimate expectations of privacy, because students are commonly observed by others when entering or exiting school restrooms. The affiants also expressed discomfort at having to handle the sample bottles, and concern that they could not wash their hands because the faucets were turned off to prevent tampering with the samples. We note, however, that the students were allowed to wash their hands in another restroom before returning to class.
[130] We recognize that some individuals may be "seriously embarrassed by the need to provide a urine sample," while other individuals may find it "no more intrusive than a routine medical examination." Earls,
[131] There are additional measures taken under the School District's Policy to help preserve privacy. Testing is done for
[132] Similar factors in Haris led the United States Supreme Court to conclude that, "given the minimally intrusive nature of the sample collection and the limited uses to which the test results are put, we conclude that the invasion of students' privacy is not significant." Id. at 834,
[188] As noted earlier, we have recognized that a school district has a "compelling interest" in providing for the safety and welfare of its students. RM, 116,
[134] As we turn to examine the efficacy of the means chosen by the School District to address that concern, it is important to note what it is that the School District must show. The Coalition appears to contend that the School District must prove that its Policy will aсhieve a specific level of sue-cess. We do not agree. Under such a stringent test, the School District would be limited to implementing only programs that have already been tried and proven. We do not think the Wyoming Constitution should preclude the School District from trying more innovative methods of deterring drug use. As the Supreme Court of Indiana observed, when the school district identified a drug problem among its students, it had "an interest in experimenting with methods to deter drug use." Linke,
[185] The proper test can be gleaned from the cases we have already discussed. The New Jersey Supreme Court explained that:
Reasonableness in this context does not require that the Board possess irrefutable proof verifying the efficacy of random drug and alcohol testing in reducing substance abuse among students. Rather, it is enough that the Board believed that its program would have some measurable ef-feet in attaining the Board's objectives.
[136] In this cease, the School District has provided a factual basis to support its concerns regarding drug and alcohol usage by students in the district. As discussed previously, surveys identified relatively prevalent and widespread drug and alcohol use among students in Goshen County schools. This problem may not seem as serious as the one in Vernonia, where the United States Supreme Court quoted this description from the district court:
The administration was at its wits end and . a large segment of the student body, particularly those involved in interscholastic athletics, was in a state of rebellion. Disciplinary actions had reached "epidemic proportions." The coincidence of an almost three-fold increase in classroom disruptions and disciplinary reports along with the staff's direct observations of students using drugs or glamorizing drug and alcohol use led the administration to the inescapable conclusion that the rebellion was being fueled by alcohol and drug abuse as well as the student(s'] mispercep-tions about the drug сulture.
Vernonia,
Teachers testified that they had seen students who appeared to be under the influence of drugs and that they had heard students speaking openly about using drugs.... A drug dog found marijuana cigarettes near the school parking lot. Police officers once found drugs or drug paraphernalia in a car driven by a Future Farmers of America member. And the school board president reported that people in the community were calling the board to discuss the "drug situation."
Earls,
[137] In the case before us now, the School District relies on information gathered by surveys to document drug and alcohol problems. This evidence is comparable to that in Joye, where survey results showed, for example, that "over thirty-three percent of Hunterdon Central's students between grades ten and twelve had used marijuana within the preceding twelve-month period," and that "thirteen percent of seniors had tried cocaine."
[138] Thus, the evidence presented by the School District indicates a drug problem somewhere in the spectrum among Ver-nonia, Linke, Joye, and Earls. It is up to the School District to determine whether the problem is serious enough to require action. School districts in Wyoming have "wide discretion in the management of the district's affairs," and this Court "will not interfere with an honest exercise of discretion by public boards or officers." Hyatt v. Big Horn School Dist. No. 4,
[$39] The real difficulty in this case surrounds the efficacy of the School District's chosen means of addressing the problem it has identified. The School District has chosen to require drug and alcohol testing for all students involved in extracurricular activities. Like the dissenters in Haris, we are troubled that the School District's Policy targets students who may be perceived as "least likely to be at risk from illicit drugs and their damaging effects." Horls,
[140] In Vernonia, the school district did not require testing for all students, or for all students involved in extracurricular activities. Rather, its drug testing policy applied only to students involved in interscholastic athleties. The United States Supreme Court upheld this policy, concluding that the school district had adequately identified a drug problem among its students, particularly among its student athletes, and that the policy implemented by the school district was rationally related to the problem because it was aimed directly at the student athletes who were a major part of the problem. In addition, the Court noted that the program was directed "narrowly to drug use by school athletes, where the risk of immediate physical harm to the drug user or those with whom he is playing his sport is particularly high." Id. at 662,
[141] In Haris, the Court upheld a drug testing policy that, like the one before us now, applied not just to student athletes, but to students involved in extracurricular activities of any kind, "such as the Academic Team, Future Farmers of America, Future Homemakers of America, band, choir, pom pon, cheerleading, and athletics."
[T42] In Haris those who challenged the drug policy, relying on Vernonia, asserted that "the testing of nonathletes does not implicate any safety concerns, and that safety is a 'crucial factor'" Id. The United States Supreme Court also rejected this argument, stating that "the safety interest furthered by drug testing is undoubtedly substantial for all children, athletes and no-nathletes alike." Id. at 886,
While in Vernonia there might have been a closer fit between the testing of athletes and the trial court's finding that the drug problem was "fueled by the 'role model' effect of athletes' drug use," such a finding was not essential to the holding.... Ver-nonia did not require the school to test the group of students most likely to use drugs, but rather considered the constitutionality of the program in the context of the public school's custodial responsibilities. Evaluating the Policy in this context, we conclude that the drug testing of ... students who participate in extracurricular activities effectively serves the School District's interest in protecting the safety and health of its students.
Id. at 887-88,
[143] These aspects of the Court's decision were particularly criticized by the dissenters, who asserted that interscholastic athletics "require close safety and health regulation; a school's choir, band, and academic team do not." Id. at 846,
Not only did the Vernonia and Tecumseh districts confront drug problems of distinctly different magnitudes, they also chose different solutions: Vernonia limited its policy to athletes; Tecumseh indiserimi-nately subjected to testing all participants in competitive extracurricular activities. Urging that "the safety interest furthered by drug testing is undoubtedly substantial for all children, athletes and nonathletes alike," :.. the Court cuts out an element essential to the Vernonia judgment.... At the margins, of course, no policy of random drug testing is perfectly tailored to the harms it seeks to address. The School District cites the dangers faced by members of the band, who must "perform extremely precise routines with heavy equipment and instruments in close proximity to other students," and by Future Farmers of America, who "are required to individually control and restrain animals as large as 1500 pounds." ... Notwithstanding nightmarish images of ... livestock run amok, and colliding tubas disturbing the peace and quiet of Tecumseh, the great majority of students the School District seeks to test in truth are engaged in activities that are not safety sensitive to an unusual degree. There is a difference between imperfect tailoring and no tailoring at all.
The Vernonia district, in sum, had two good reasons for testing athletes: . Sports team members faced special health risks and they "were the leaders of the drug culture." ... No similar reason, and no other tenable justification, explains Tecumseh's decision to target for testing all participants in every competitive extracurricular activity.
Id. at 851-58,
[T 44] The Coalition, in the case before us now, makes similar arguments against the School District's Policy: there is no evidence that participants in all extracurricular activities are leaders of the drug culture, and there are no special health risks faced by those who participate in, for example, choir, drama club, or student council. For these reasons, the Coalition argues that there is, in effect, a disconnect between the problem identified by the School District-widespread drug and alcohol use among students-and the means chosen to address that problem-testing all students who participate in extracurricular activities. Based on this disconnect, the Coalition urges us to find the Policy unconstitutional.
[145] By a narrow margin, however, we believe that the School District has demоnstrated a sufficient connection between the means chosen and the problem identified. The School District has explained that it chose to test students who participate in extracurricular activities in order to "undermine the effects of peer pressure by providing legitimate reasons for students to refuse use of illegal drugs and/or alcohol." The School District's Policy, like the policy considered in Haris, ~
seeks to discourage demand for drugs by changing the school's environment in order to combat the single most important factor leading schoolchildren to take drugs, namely, peer pressure.... It offers the adolescent a nonthreatehing reason to decline his friend's drug-use invitations, namely, that he intends to play baseball, participate in debate, join the band, or engage in any one of half a dozen useful, interesting, and important activities.
Id. at 840-41,
[146] In addition, the Coalition alleged in its complaint that a majority of students in Goshen County schools participate in extracurricular activities, and the School District admitted this allegation. Under the School District's Pоlicy, then, a majority of the stu
[147] The Coalition fervently stresses the importance of extracurricular activities, asserting that they are "critically important" in developing "the type of responsible students who will some day be leaders in our communities and in our State." The Coalition offered evidence that involvement in extracurricular activities is particularly significant to students who wish to pursue higher education. We readily acknowledge the importance of extracurricular activities in Wyoming's public schools. But we also recognize, as did the United States Supreme Court, that participation in extracurricular activities is a voluntary choice. Vernonia,
[T48] Because participation in extracurricular activities is optional, the School District's Policy in this case, like the one in Earls, "preserves an option" for a student who chooses not to be tested for drugs and alcohol. "He can refuse testing while paying a price (nonparticipation) that is serious, but less severe than expulsion from the school." Earls,
[149] Finally, we note evidence that the School District did not adopt this Policy hastily or without careful consideration. Before thе Policy was adopted, the Superintendent of Schools sent a letter to parents and guardians of school students. In this letter, the Superintendent summarized the survey results from the past several years as indicating "a serious prevalence of alcohol and drug use among our students." He explained previous efforts to address that problem, including educational and awareness programs, but said that "other school districts can and are doing more. Random drug testing of students involved in extra-curricular activities is an example of what other districts have sue-cessfully implemented to encourage youngsters to avoid the use of drugs and alcohol." He then invited recipients to a public forum in order to "hear from representatives from other school districts about the process of implementing a random drug and alcohol policy," and to receive "public comment on this issue."
[150] After engaging in this process to assess the Policy, the School District's board of trustees adopted the Policy by a vote of eight to one. As the Superintendent explained in his affidavit,
The policy recognizes that many of the students participating in extracurricular activities are viewed as role models to other students and that it is important that they avoid drug and alcohol use in their position as role models. It is also the position of the Board that to achieve the goal of reducing risks of alcohol and drug abuse and to maximize the skills and talents participating in extracurricular activities, it is important that participants refrain from drug and alcohol use. If is the belief of our school district that this policy will assist in that endeavor.
(Emphasis added.) As we noted earlier, when we consider the efficacy of the School District's Policy, "it is enough that the Board
[T51] In sum, we acknowledge that Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution protects public school students from unreasonable searches and seizures. In considering whether the testing mandated by the School District's Policy is reasonable under all of the cireumstances, we recognized that students, particularly those who participate in extracurricular activities, are already subject to more stringent rules and regulations than adults, and so have limited expectations of privacy in the school setting. We found that the School District's Policy adequately preserves the students' personal privacy rights, and appropriately limits the degree of invasion into those rights. We concluded that the School District has a compelling interest in providing for the safety and welfare of its students, and that it therefore has a legitimate interest in deterring drug and alcohol use among students. On the closest question of all, we determined that the School District showed that its Policy requiring random, sus-picionless drug and alcohol testing for all students who participate in extracurricular activities is rationally related to furthering its interest in deterring drug and alcohol use among students.
[152] We conclude that the Coalition has not demonstrated that the School District's Policy subjects students to searches that are unreasonable under all of the cireumstances. Accordingly, we hold that the School Dis-triet's Policy does not violаte Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution.
Equal Protection
[T53] The United States Constitution provides that "No State shall ... deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. Equal protection "is essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike." City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center,
[T54] In determining whether there is a violation of equal protection doe-trine,
we require the party claiming such violation to first demonstrate that the classification at issue "treats similarly situated persons unequally." Matter of ALJ,836 P.2d 307 , 313 (Wyo.1992). If we determine that the classification does "treat similarly situated persons unequally," we apply two different levels of serutiny depending upon the nature of the classification to determine whether equal proteсtion is violated.
That is, where a statute ... affects a fundamental interest or creates an inherently suspect classification, the court must strictly serutinize that statute ... to determine if it is necessary to achieve a compelling state interest. However, if the statute ... only affects ordinary interests in the economic and social welfare area, the court need only determine that it is rationally related to a legitimate state objective.
Ellett v. State,
[155] The Coalition claims that the School District's Policy divides similarly situated students into two classifications: those who participate in extracurricular activities, and those who do not. It claims that the Policy treats the two classes unequally: those who participate in extracurricular activities are subject to random, suspicionless testing for drugs and alcohol, while those who do not participate in extracurricular activities are not subject to such testing. In contrast, the School District argues that the Policy does not create two separate but similarly situated classes that are treated differently. According to the School District, every student who attends school in Goshеn County has an equal opportunity to receive an education. Every student has the same rights, including the right to choose whether or not to participate in extracurricular activities. Further, the School District contends, "Ito the extent a student chooses to participate in activities, each and every student is similarly treated in that all students are equally required to comply with the rules and regulations" adopted by the School District, including the Policy requiring drug and alcohol testing.
[156] Even if we assume, without deciding, that the Coalition has accurately identified a classification through which similarly situated persons are treated unequally, the argument presented by the Coalition is unpersuasive. The Coalition contends that the School District's Policy must be subject to strict scrutiny. However, it does not claim that students are a suspect class, nor does it assert that students have a fundamental interest in participating in extracurricular activities. Rather, the Coalition urges us to apply strict serutiny because "the fundamental right' at issue in this case is the right to be free from an unreasonable search undertaken in violation of Article 1, § 4 of the Wyoming Constitution." * This contention fails because, as already established, the School District's Policy does not subjеct students to unreasonable searches. We therefore reject the Coalition's position that we should subject the School District's Policy to strict scrutiny under our equal protection analysis.
[157] If we ask instead whether the School District's Policy is rationally related to a legitimate state objective, we find that question already resolved by our previous analysis. In determining that the drug and alcohol testing required under the Policy was reasonable under all of the cireumstances, we concluded that the School District has a compelling interest in providing for the safety and welfare of its students, and a legitimate interest in deterring drug and alcohol use among students. We also concluded that the School District's Policy is reasonably related to furthering those interests With these conclusions, we also effectively determined that the School District's Policy is rationally related to a legitimate state objective.
[¥58] The equal protection argument, as presented by the Coalition, can succeed only if the Coalition also succeeds on its search and seizure claim. Our conclusion that the School District's Policy does not subject students to unreasonable searches and seizures is, therefore, determinative of the Coalition's equal protection claim as well.
Due Process
[159] Article 1, § 6 of the Wyoming Constitution provides that "No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law." The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution contains similar language, which applies to the states pursuant to the Fourteenth Amendment. We have explained that a "party claiming an infringement of his right to due process has the burden of demonstrating both that he has a protected interest and that such interest has been affected in an impermissible way. The question is whether there has been a denial of fundamental fairness." DH v. Wyoming Department of Family Services,
[160] The Coalition points out that, under the School District's Policy, a student found to be in violation of the Policy may appeal that decision to the Superintendent or his designee. Under the terms of the Policy, the Superintendent's decision on a student's
[T61]l The School District maintаins the due process provisions of the state and federal constitutions apply only if the Coalition shows that it has been deprived of a protected life, liberty, or property interest. Characterizing a student's participation in extracurricular activities a privilege rather than a protected right, the School District contends that the Coalition has not shown that any student's due process rights are infringed by the Policy. The district court adopted the School District's position, ruling that participation in extracurricular activities
is not a protected interest. See, e.g., In re University - Interscholastic League,20 S.W.3d 690 , 692 (Tex.2000) (right to participate in extracurricular activities is not a fundamental right); Mancuso v. Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Ass'n, Inc.,453 Mass. 116 ,900 N.E.2d 518 , 527-28 (2009) (for due process purposes, student's property interest in her right to public education did not imply that she also had a property interest in her participation in extracurricular activities); Adamek v. Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Ass'n, Inc.,57 Pa.Cmwlth. 261 ,426 A.2d 1206 (1981) (collecting cases that found participation in extracurricular activities was not a fundamental property right).
Though the Wyoming Supreme Court has never addressed the issue, the Court finds these and the myriad of concurring cases pеrsuasive because Wyoming requires compulsory school attendance. Wyo. Stat. Aun. §§ 21-4-101-107 (LexisNexis 2009). The Wyoming Legislature has also set forth a right for students age 5 to 21 to attend public school. Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 21-4-301 (LexisNexis 2009). However, there are no legislative counterparts mandating students' participation in extracurricular activities or creating a statutory right to such participation.
This Court finds that the Goshen County students do not hold a property interest in their participation in extracurricular activities.... Without such a protected interest, they have no right to the protection of due process as provided by the U.S. and Wyoming Constitutions. See Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,408 U.S. 564 , 569 [92 S.Ct. 2701 ,33 L.Ed.2d 548 ] (1972).
[T 62] We do not need to agree or disagree with the district court's conclusion, because we find a more fundamental flaw in the Coalition's due process claim. As stated above, a party claiming an infringement of his due process rights must demonstrate both a protected interest and an impermissible infringement on that interest. DFH, 138,
Remaining Issues
[163] Because the Coalition has failed to prove that the School District's Policy is unconstitutional, there is no basis for their claim that they are entitled to a permanent injunction against implementation of the Policy, or for their claim that the district court erred in granting the School District's motion
Notes
. As the district court observed, the Coalition includes several named plaintiffs who may lack standing to bring these claims, including, for example, at least one person who had already graduated from high school and was no longer subject to the drug testing policy. But as also pointed out by the district court, it has been established by affidavits that at least two of the students named as plaintiffs have been tested pursuant to the drug testing policy. Based on the standing of at least those two members of the Coalition and their parents, we agree with the district court's conclusion that the Coalition has standing in this matter. See Northfork Citizens for Responsible Development v. Park County Bd. of County Comm'rs,
. The United States Supreme Court recently revisited Belton and abandoned its bright-line rule. It now holds that a law enforcement officer may search the passenger compartment of a vehicle incident to an arrest only if it is reasonable to believe that the arrested person can access the vehicle at the time of the search, or that evidence of the offense for which he was arrested might be found in the vehicle. Arizona v. Gant,
. The district court placed these affidavits under seal to protect the minor affiants. Sharing the district court's concern about protecting the identities of these students, we will discuss these affidavits only in broad terms.
