Pubdate: Sat, 23 Dec 2000 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2000 Associated Press Author: Don Thompson, Associated Press Writer ARIZONA HOLDS LESSONS FOR CALIFORNIA DRUG TREATMENT PLAN Arizona Holds Lessons for California Drug Treatment PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -- A quarter of first-time criminal drug offenders walk away from court-ordered treatment programs in Arizona's largest metropolitan area -- and there's nothing judges or prosecutors can do about it. The high dropout rate among drug offenders is Arizona's toughest problem since voters passed Proposition 200, which mandated treatment instead of prison or jail for those convicted of using or possessing illegal drugs. California could soon confront the same problem as it rushes to implement a similar proposal -- Proposition 36, passed by voters last month. Indeed, the four years of experience Arizona has with its drug treatment programs gives California some real-life lessons for its own plan. For example, rather than threatening drug offenders with prison, Arizona law enforcement officials now offer rewards such as zoo tickets and ice cream cones to offenders who stay clean. Instead of a weekend in jail, punishments include a weekend picking up trash. While California might also have to shift philosophy, its problems will be far greater because it has a larger population, more inmates, and already crowded probation and treatment programs. Arizona had to treat about 6,000 offenders each year. California is projected to have 36,000 offenders -- six times as many -- and its existing community treatment programs already have long waiting lists. By law, Arizona caps each probation officer's caseload at 60. Caseloads in California routinely top 300. "Do drugs, do time" once was the slogan of prosecutors in conservative Maricopa County, where the bulk of Arizona's population lives, including in the cities of Phoenix, Mesa and Scottsdale. Maricopa County Superior Court Commissioner Colleen McNally used to operate her drug court much as California judges do now: offenders who tested dirty for drugs or failed to show up for treatment or counseling sessions were immediately handcuffed and led away to spend a few days in the county jail. These days, McNally has traded her stick for a carrot. She hands out tickets to the Phoenix Zoo or Arizona Science Museum to those who stay clean. She leads her crowded courtroom in applause for those who advance to a less-restrictive treatment program. "I give them these little polished stones when they graduate," McNally said. "It was just an afterthought, but they talk about it. A lot of these people don't have a lot of self-esteem. "Little things mean a lot, that's what I noticed," she said. "My first thought was they were going to be disdainful of zoo tickets, but they weren't. Those guys with the tattoos like the zoo tickets, too -- they just like the recognition." In Arizona, those caught using drugs or skipping 12-step treatment programs are punished with community service work or required to sit through a full day observing endlessly repetitive drug court proceedings. Those who can't seem to kick their habit on the street are offered residential treatment. But some, like 35-year-old Robert Morrison of Phoenix, simply refuse. Morrison tested positive for methamphetamines Oct. 23, then skipped three additional drug tests and a court appearance. When Morrison refused residential treatment, McNally terminated his drug court participation and ordered him back into three years of standard probation. But Morrison walked out of her courtroom essentially a free man, albeit with a permanent felony drug record. "She told me I had to go to rehab, and I was like, 'The hell with that -- I can't afford 28 days (off work),"' Morrison said moments later. "What we're finding in Arizona, in a relatively short-term study, is approximately 25 percent of probationers are thumbing their nose at the judge," said Barnett Lotstein, a special assistant Maricopa County prosecutor. Zachary Dal Pra, the county's deputy chief probation officer, estimated the number may be closer to 30 percent. Arizona is only now beginning to study the effectiveness of its programs, but a preliminary study by the Arizona Supreme Court found 61 percent graduated while 39 percent failed to complete treatment. About 76 percent stayed drug-free during the program, the court found. Carey McGrath, who oversees the county's drug court counselors, said the new system appears to be resulting in fewer positive drug tests. "So something's working," she said. "There's definitely a different feeling in the courtroom. You don't see people sitting in their chairs quaking in fear." However, San Diego Superior Court Judge James Milliken said he was "appalled" when he observed Arizona's program in January and saw how many offenders like Morrison skip treatment. "We're going to create a program that's more rigorous," Milliken insisted. "If they relapse, we can't put them in custody -- but we can put them in a residential treatment program that they aren't going to like any better. "We're not going to take 'No' for an answer," said Milliken, who sits on San Diego County's Substance Abuse Policy Advisory Committee. "We're going to insist on residential treatment and if they refuse, to me that means they're not amenable to treatment and we can pack them off to prison." Arizona judges and prosecutors sought similar ways around Proposition 200's incarceration ban, only to be repeatedly struck down by the state Supreme Court. By necessity, they are slowly switching to a system of rewards instead of punishment. Judges and probation officers are toying with offering offenders everything from ice cream cones to community college tuition vouchers. But some offenders seem unreachable, and they just walk away. "The court is basically saying we don't have any way to supervise you, so we're going to release you back into the community with no supervision and wait for you to commit another crime," said probation officer Dal Pra. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake