Pubdate: Thu, 12 Oct 2000 Source: Shepherd Express (WI) Copyright: 2000 Alternative Publications Incorporated. Contact: http://www.shepherd-express.com/ Author: JOEL MCNALLY Newshawk note; This article also appeared in the Capital Times, 14 October 2000 DARE TO BE A DOPE INTELLIGENCE QUESTIONED; STUPIDITY REWARDED Assembly Speaker Scott Jensen has shocked many of his Republican colleagues by breaking ranks with the conservative right to raise intelligent questions about how money is being spent in the war on drugs. Intelligent questions have no place in the war on drugs. They send the wrong message. The war on drugs has been described as the ultimate Humpty Dumpty social policy. When all of the king's horses and all of the king's men couldn't put Humpty Dumpty together again, the automatic response from the king was to add millions of dollars to the budget for more horses and more men. That upside-down logic is what Waukesha County Dist. Atty. Paul Bucher has been trying to explain to Jensen-that you can't judge the effectiveness of an anti-drug program by its results. Jensen started it by suggesting that DARE, one of the most politically beloved drug education programs of all time, has been parading through the streets without any clothes. At a time when government claims to be looking for money to do something meaningful about drug problems-like, say, providing drug treatment to the long waiting list of addicts who need it-Jensen said it was time to re-examine how anti-drug funds were being used. He specifically mentioned DARE-Drug Abuse Resistance Education-as a program that would have difficulty withstanding public scrutiny if policy makers ever looked at its results. Actually, Jensen understated the case. A few years ago, the federal Department of Education commissioned an independent study of drug education programs, including DARE. One of the more shocking conclusions was that children who participated in the DARE program were more likely to use drugs than those who weren't subjected to the program. It's a good thing there isn't a Double DARE program, or all of our kids would be junkies. It doesn't take any big national study to figure out what is wrong with the DARE program. DARE is a drug education program for school children taught by law enforcement officers. Young people look to police officers for guidance about what recreational substances to use about as often as they consult the cops on what music to buy. Perhaps the most effective drug education in recent years has been some of the slick advertising campaigns. No, not those silly commercials about frying eggs inside your head. The ones that make kids withdrawing into drugs look like real losers who are missing out on a lot. All of those police videos on TV show us what law enforcement officers are trained to do regarding drugs-run, shout, break down doors, slam people up against walls, etc. Those educational techniques employ a completely different set of muscles than the subtler communication skills of classroom teaching. Law enforcement often has a tin ear when it comes to communicating with young people. As part of the DARE program, representatives of the Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office have taken luxury sports cars, confiscated from drug dealers, around to high schools to show off to students. The message of the deputies: If you deal drugs, we're going to get all of your personal possessions when you go to prison. The message received by students: Man, drug dealers drive some fine cars! It's no surprise that District Attorney Bucher blasted Jensen for raising even the mildest of questions about the DARE program. DARE has never really been about combating drug abuse. It's all about expanding the budgets of law enforcement. That's why Bucher publicly took the absurd position that looking at results was not the way to judge the effectiveness of an anti-drug program. He sure wouldn't make that argument about any program that was producing results. Instead of looking at effects on children who have participated in the program, Bucher has a better idea. Why not just look for any positive trends in society in the reduction of drug use among young people and attribute those successes to DARE? That way, instead of increasing the funding of programs that work and reducing funds to those that don't-such as DARE-we can continue to expand the budgets of law enforcement, results be damned. Never mind that as many as 80% of the inmates in American prisons have a history of substance abuse. Meanwhile, the number of drug treatment slots in the United States has declined by more than half since 1993. Drug treatment is now available to less than one-tenth of the inmates who need it. Neither is treatment available to most of those on the street who want it to save their own lives. It sure would be nice if we could find some money to treat those people, but Jensen is naive to expect politicians to shift money away from ineffective programs. That would send the wrong message on drugs. Namely, that we value actual results over political posturing. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart