Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Evelyn Nieves Cited: Yes on 36 http://www.drugreform.org/ Bookmarks: For Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act items http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm For other state initiative items: CO: http://www.mapinc.org/props/co/ MA: http://www.mapinc.org/props/ma/ OR: http://www.mapinc.org/props/or/ UT: http://www.mapinc.org/props/ut/ NV: http://www.mapinc.org/props/nv/ CALIFORNIA GETS SET TO SHIFT ON SENTENCING DRUG USERS SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 9 - California's enormous prison system, the largest in the Western Hemisphere with more than 162,000 inmates, may be radically altered since voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved a measure that will sentence nonviolent drug offenders to treatment instead of prison. Nearly one in three prisoners in California is serving time for a drug- related crime, more per capita than any other state. The new law, Proposition 36, puts California at the forefront of a national movement to change drug laws; it will send first- and second-time nonviolent drug offenders into treatment, reducing the prison population by as many as 36,000 inmates a year, according to the state's nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office. The measure, which comes as states nationwide re-examine their drug sentencing laws, was approved by 61 percent of voters despite strong opposition from virtually all of the state's law enforcement officials, judges and some health care groups. It represents the most significant change in California's criminal justice policy since the 1994 passage of the "three strikes" law, which mandated tough prison terms for people convicted of a third felony offense. "This shows that we can draw distinctions between real criminals or real crime and violent crime and drug users," said Dave Fratello, a spokesman for the Yes on 36 campaign. "It also punctures the conventional wisdom among politicians that what voters want is an across-the-board zero-tolerance drug policy." Mr. Fratello added, "The only political competition on the drug issue has been to see who can be tougher, and I think what you're seeing is a radical rethinking of that." Proposition 36 seeks to focus on treating drug addiction as a health problem rather than a crime. It requires probation and drug treatment for people convicted of possession, use and transporting for personal use of controlled substances and similar parole violations. Those caught selling or manufacturing drugs are excluded from the treatment mandate, as are offenders also arrested on nondrug-related charges like theft or gun possession. The law is to take effect in July 2001. Proponents of the proposition, the Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act, emphasized the cost savings of the shift. By diverting thousands of drug abusers from jail or prison, the Legislative Analyst's Office estimated that the measure would save the state about $250 million a year in incarceration costs and save local governments $40 million a year in operations costs. The measure allocates $120 million a year for drug treatment, estimated at $4,000 a patient. That represents a large cut of the costs - about $20,000 a year - to keep a person in prison. It also provides what the Legislative Analyst's Office estimated as a onetime savings of up to $550 million in reduced costs for prison construction. Opponents of Proposition 36 said the measure would decimate the state's drug courts, which already send thousands of drug addicts a year to treatment instead of prison. More than 100 judges last month signed a petition criticizing the measure for banning two tools those drug courts use extensively: it would not pay for drug tests and it would outlaw the short jail terms the courts use to punish people caught using drugs during treatment. "Proposition 36 will spend $120 million on treatment that will not work," said Judge Stephen Manley of Santa Clara County Superior Court, president of the California Association of Drug Court Professionals. "What does work is when you hold drug addicts accountable." Under Proposition 36, drug offenders who fail treatment programs twice could be sentenced to jail or prison if they are found to be unamenable to treatment, and those who fail three times are required to serve time. Advocates of the measure say that it will reach far more addicts than drug courts, which reach only about 5 percent of offenders. Larry Brown, executive director of the California District Attorneys Association, said that the initiative's passage would probably mean that prosecutors will "sharply curtail" their practice of reducing drug-dealing charges to possession, done to expedite cases. He also expected a decline in plea bargains that reduce accompanying charges, like theft or burglary, to possession. Mr. Fratello said the initiative omitted drug testing from what it would finance so that treatment would not be short-changed. "That doesn't mean that judges can't assign testing," he said. "What we may need to do is reassess the whole way we conduct testing. Maybe we make the offender pay for his own tests. At $4 to $7 a test, that's not a lot to ask to stay out of prison." Proponents of Proposition 36 outspent the opposition by more than 10 to 1. The measure was supported by three billionaires: George Soros, the New York financier and philanthropist who also contributed heavily to the measure that legalized "medical marijuana" in California four years ago; Peter Lewis, chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company in Cleveland; and John Sperling, chairman of the University of Phoenix. Each contributed about $1 million for Proposition 36's passage. The three also financed voter initiatives passed Tuesday that relaxed drug laws in four other states: those measures concerned legalizing medical marijuana in Colorado and Nevada, and laws restricting government seizure of drug offenders' property in Oregon and Utah. A sixth initiative they financed lost in Massachusetts. It was similar to Proposition 36 except that it included low-level drug dealers among offenders who would qualify for treatment. The three men have vowed to expand their support for initiatives addressing what they called the failure of the nation's strict drug policies. The California District Attorneys Association said it had not decided whether to mount a legal challenge to Proposition 36. Judge Manley said, however, that the California Association of Drug Court Professionals would try to make the initiative work by seeking money from the legislature for drug testing and by pushing for strict licensing and regulation of drug-treatment providers. "I think we need to move forward now," Judge Manley said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D