Pubdate: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 Source: Spokesman-Review (WA) Copyright: 2000 Cowles Publishing Company Contact: http://www.spokane.net/news.asp Author: Doug Floyd - For the editorial board DRUG COURT COSTS WELL WORTH PAYING Our View: Spokane County commissioners made a wise investment in restoring at-risk lives and reducing crime. In the midst of a taxpayer rebellion, cost-conscious public officials don't spend money on nonessentials unless they have a clear vision of an adequate payback. Tuesday's funding decision by the Board of Spokane County Commissioners is therefore a show of well-deserved confidence in the county's four-year-old drug court program. The commissioners came up with more than $88,000 to carry the program to the end of the year once current federal funding expires June 30. Part of the county appropriation will secure an additional $50,000 in federal funds that depended on local matching money. Four years ago, Spokane County joined a handful of other counties trying out the innovative program. It steers nonviolent drug offenders into a high-intensity treatment program -- a program many knowledgeable officials insist is tougher than incarceration and produces much better longterm results. Today, hundreds of local jurisdictions have adopted the drug court concept as a proven method of easing the demand for expensive jail and prison cells and, more important, reducing the rate at which substance abusers reoffend. Experience shows that drug court participants return to criminal patterns less than 25 percent as often as similar offenders who take the more conventional path through the corrections system. Payoffs to the community -- whose tax dollars are entrusted to the commissioners -- are substantial. It's not just that sending an offender through drug court costs about one-tenth of what it would cost to send him to prison. It also reduces the costs society bears when crimes are committed to support drug habits or while under their influence. Turning at-risk lives around also reduces the level of social decay associated with drug abuse, giving would-be drains on the public treasury the chance to be contributors. These and other promises of the drug court system are well documented in Spokane County and in other jurisdictions, but that doesn't make it easy for the keepers of the budget to invest scarce resources in nontraditional methods. For now, the commissioners have pledged funds only for the rest of this year. When and if they commit the $286,000 it would take to continue the program through 2002 will depend on a closer review the commissioners plan to take. Scrutiny is no threat. If efficiencies can be found without sacrificing the effectiveness of the program, so much the better. The important thing for now is that the county commissioners have found drug court, and its positive impact on community life, as a sound expenditure of public funds. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk