Pubdate: Wed, 25 Oct 2000 Source: Ventura County Star (CA) Copyright: 2000, Ventura County Star Contact: P.O. Box 6711, Ventura CA 93006 Fax: (805) 650-2950 Website: http://www.staronline.com/ Author: Timm Herdt Note: Timm Herdt is chief of the Star's state bureau. Bookmark: For Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act items: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm TWO REPORTS FROM THE FRONT Drug War: A senator and a judge reach opposite conclusions on Proposition 36. For state Sen. Cathie Wright, a visit two years ago to the Northern California Women's Facility at Stockton was an experience that has haunted her since. In conversation after conversation, she has recounted the sadness of looking into the eyes of a woman inmate who had lost any vestige of hope -- hope of ever again seeing her children, hope of a life with meaning, hope for even a moment of joy. Like 90 percent of inmates at Stockton, she was there because of drugs, often because of a relationship with a man who used and sold the poison, and used the woman as a second-class business partner to deliver drugs. In response, Wright tried to do a small thing that might give some of these women at least the chance for hope. She wrote legislation that would have allowed women convicted of drug felonies to receive CalWorks assistance -- housing vouchers, job training and child care -- upon their release. To qualify, they would have had to submit to regular drug tests and stay clean. The bill passed the Legislature, but was vetoed by Gov. Gray Davis, who declared: "Convicted felons do not deserve the same treatment as law-abiding citizens." Wright knows that the cycle of wasted lives will continue. The state will spend $20,000 a year to keep mom in prison and up to $100,000 a year to place her children in a group home. Last week when she filled out her absentee ballot, the conservative Republican from Simi Valley voted Yes on Proposition 36, the initiative that would require nonviolent drug offenders to be sentenced to treatment and probation. She might have voted differently, she said, if the prison system offered adequate drug treatment to inmates, or if CalWorks provided some level of assistance to women after they are released from serving time for drug crimes. "We're just destroying more lives in the name of being tough on crime," she said. "I'm not soft on crime -- reward and punishment, that's what life is all about," Wright said. "But for a lot less money we could turn these people around and make them tax providers instead of tax spenders." * * * * Ventura County Superior Court Judge Barry Klopfer has also looked into the eyes of drug addicts. But he, as judge of the county's Drug Court, has seen hope and success -- and despair. He's looked into the bright, proud eyes of drug-court graduates who have tackled the most difficult challenge of their lives. "I've seen people who've succeeded against all odds," he says. Klopfer knows that drug treatment can work -- but only when the client is truly committed to succeeding. "I don't think anybody has taken a position that drug treatment is for everybody," he said. "We are dealing with a population in which change does not come easy . . . And when you're talking about a change as dramatic and significant as changing a many-year pattern of illegal drug usage, it's a hard thing to do." Klopfer's tough-love conclusion: Some addicts need to spend some hard time in jail or prison if they are ever to confront their problem. Not that incarceration alone works wonders, Klopfer added. "You put a guy in jail -- nine months, 10 months, 12 months, it doesn't matter -- and the guy gets back out of jail and many times he uses again before he even gets off the property. Do we have any sense that we're being successful at the war on drugs in that way? Absolutely not." Klopfer fears that voters, disillusioned with the failures of the war on drugs and eager for a simple solution, may well embrace Proposition 36 on Nov. 7. The pro-Proposition 36 rhetoric, he said, has an undeniable, knee-jerk appeal. "They talk in terms of drug addiction being a health problem," he said. "Well, of course it is a health problem. But it's not the kind of health problem where if we just get enough antibiotics we can cure it." Treatment is not a magic bullet, Klopfer said. He knows it's not going to work, for instance, when a defendant comes before him and says she is willing to accept treatment -- but unwilling to move out of the house she shares with a drug-dealing boyfriend. "You wanna know what scares me the most about Proposition 36?" he asks. "We're setting them up for another failure -- and we're not talking about people who've experienced a lot of success in their lives." * * * * There you have it. Two views of the drug war from those who have seen its casualties. Wright knows that a system based on incarceration callously wastes lives -- not just those of abusers, but of their families. Klopfer knows that a system that uses treatment can work, but that one that assumes treatment is a universal cure-all is doomed to failure. So which is the better choice? To voters looking for guidance, perhaps it comes down to this: Which is most likely to be modified by lawmakers seeking a workable middle ground? Wright tried to change the current system and got nowhere. We know her answer. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew