Pubdate: Fri, 06 Oct 2000 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times Contact: Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053 Fax: (213) 237-7679 Website: http://www.latimes.com/ Forum: http://www.latimes.com/discuss/ Author: EUN-KYUNG KIM, Associated Press Writer BUSH OUTLINES PLANS ON DRUG ABUSE CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa--George W. Bush blamed what he said were the past decade's record-high teen-age drug abuse rates on the Clinton administration, calling it "one of the worst public policy failures of the 1990s." Addressing a gathering at a community center Friday morning, Bush acknowledged that teen drug use has leveled off in the last two years. But he said many indicators still show teen drug use at its highest levels in more than a decade. The Texas governor prepared for a two-day swing through Florida after outlining new initiatives to curb drug abuse, particularly among teenagers. In prepared remarks, Bush said the issue is an area "in which parents badly need an ally." He cited drug use as a major factor in rising health costs, the spread of disease, the quality of public housing and the decline of families and education. Bush criticized the Clinton administration's efforts in trying to control drug abuse, saying one of the President's first acts in office was to slash the staff of the White House drug policy adviser's office by 80 percent. Since then, Bush said, the percentage of high school seniors who smoke marijuana daily has grown to its highest level in nearly 20 years, increasing by more than 300 percent since 1992. He added that daily use of marijuana by eight graders increased by 700 percent in that period. "There is no substitute for presidential leadership," Bush said. "More than any other person in America, the President can set a tone, deliver a message, lead a cause. This is a cause I will lead." Bob Weiner, spokesman for White House drug policy director Barry McCaffrey, criticized Bush's numbers as outdated, saying he was "making nonsense" out of the figures. "We have to have accuracy in the statements," he said. "The numbers that Mr. Bush used are out-of-date numbers." Weiner said Clinton "streamlined" executive branch staff when he first took office, including the drug control policy office. But since then, Clinton and McCaffrey expanded it, he said. "They re-upped the staff to a level that was competent to do the job. Bush forgot that point." During his campaign stop, Bush pushed several initiatives, including one that would provide $25 million to support nonprofit agencies working to help parents curb drug abuse by their children. He also said he would push for efforts to promote drug-free workplaces, saying that drug abuse costs companies about $98 billion a year in lost productivity. If elected, Bush said, he would "direct our government to assess, state-by-state, where people in need of drug treatment aren't being treated. By some estimates, there are 3 million Americans in this category," he said. Overall, the Texas governor said, he would increase federal funding by $1 billion to address the problem. The idea continues Bush's focus on the family, a theme he hit upon several times Thursday while campaigning in Michigan, Wisconsin and Iowa. Promising to "put government back on the side of parents," Bush outlined steps to make workplace compensatory time easier to claim and to give parents flexibility to work from home. He also said he would require libraries and schools that get federal funds to install Internet filters that are designed to prevent children from viewing sexually explicit Web sites. In a campaign visit at Helen Keller Middle School, in a solidly Republican suburb of Detroit, Bush urged the television industry to voluntarily restore a nightly "family hour" between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m., and establish a new code system using the letter "v" to identify violent programs. "One of the biggest problems in our society today is that our children are being forced to grow up too soon," Bush said. He declared running mate Dick Cheney's Thursday night debate performance a victory. "He won it hands down tonight," Bush said via satellite to a post-debate rally for Cheney in Danville, Ky., the site of the event. "America got to see why I picked this man as my running mate. He's the real thing," said Bush, who also predicted he would win the predominantly Democratic state. A three-day CNN-USA Today-Gallup tracking poll released Thursday showed Gore was up 51 percent to Bush's 40 percent. The two were virtually even Tuesday in the tracking poll of likely voters, which has an error margin of 4 percentage points. The new poll was taken Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, including some voters before and after the first presidential debate. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager