Pubdate: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 Source: Meriden Record-Journal, The (CT) Copyright: 2000, The Record-Journal Publishing Co. Contact: 11 CrownStreet, P.O. Box 915, Meriden, CT 06450 Fax: (203) 639-0210 Feedback: http://www.record-journal.com/rj/contacts/letters.html Website: http://www.record-journal.com/ DRUG USE AND SUSPICIONS The fuss and bother over the presidential election has obscured some other interesting results from Election Day. One of these was the passage of Proposition 36 in California, with 61 percent of the vote. The new law is an important step in moving the country toward treating drug use as a health issue, and not a crime. By sending first- and second-time nonviolent drug offenders into treatment, officials predict that they will reduce the state's prison population - the largest in the Western hemisphere according to the New York Times - by 36,000 and save nearly $250 million in incarceration costs. The nation's strict drug laws, and the concomitant philosophy of zero tolerance, have swelled the nation's prisons to an unbearable degree, and this proposition is a step in a more sane and mature direction. Four other states - Colorado, Nevada, Oregon and Utah - also passed measures that relax laws against medical marijuana use and restrict seizure of drug offenders' property. Although zero tolerance, on the surface, seems like an adequate response to the drug problem, it fails to address the difficult nuances. To punish people unrelentingly who have run afoul of these harsh laws is not right. We should have learned this lesson from Prohibition. We have an example locally where the Southington police chief's daughter-in-law has been arrested for possession of marijuana in her home. As a result, the couple's children have been placed with relatives, although it does not seem that her home will be seized. On a side note, the transfer of the couple's home three days before the arrest from the police chief to his son - who also is a member of the force - - and his daughter-in-law can only arouse suspicions that word of the impending arrest had leaked out, and the chief was maneuvering to distance himself from the affair, particularly if a asset forfeiture was possibly in the offing. He has not been available for comment, but upon his return he should provide some explanation. In any case, it is not a question of condoning drug activity, but of dealing with it in a humane and effective way. If, in fact, a person is only guilty of a nonviolent offense, then jail and harsh seizure laws are not the long-term solution. It is primarily a health issue that should receive treatment and counseling if appropriate. California has set the tone for the nation with the passage of Proposition 36, and it is likely that we will see similar measures pass as more people realize that the war on drugs is often a self-lacerating war that we need to rethink. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew