Pubdate: Sun, 26 Mar 2000 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Copyright: 2000 The Hartford Courant Contact: http://www.courant.com/ Forum: http://chat.courant.com/scripts/webx.exe Author: Tom Condon ASSESSING THE 'WAR' ON DRUGS Four Trinity College seniors started with prescription drugs last weekend, on a tragic binge that would leave one dead and another almost dead. At some point, police think, they left campus to buy heroin. Abuse of prescription drugs is a coming fad. Sadly, so is the use of heroin. ``Heroin is making a big comeback,'' said Superior Court Judge Jorge Simon. ``We're getting heroin cases from Marlborough, East Hartford, Glastonbury.'' We've been fighting the war on drugs, the Vietnam of domestic policy, for 25 years, and still, heroin is making a comeback. One might think this would cause a review of how we're approaching the problem. But, no, it hasn't. On Thursday, White House drug czar Gen. Barry McCaffrey delivered his annual report on the nation's anti-drug efforts. He conceded that heroin has become more popular among young people, but still insisted ``substantial progress'' has been made in the fight against illegal drugs. His $18 billion budget for the 2000 fiscal year earmarks two-thirds of the money for law enforcement, interdiction and other brilliant strategies such as spraying herbicides on Central American farms. One-third goes for treatment and education. ``For those who say this is a war, we're winning,'' McCaffrey said. Look at the Trinity case, the drug-riddled Aquan Salmon case and at more than 3,000 inmates in Connecticut prisons for drug crimes, and Gen. McCaffrey sounds like Gen. Westmoreland. Eric E. Sterling, president of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, would agree. ``Gen. McCaffrey's scoreboard must be broken,'' Sterling said. ``Deaths are up, high school kids can get drugs more easily than ever, drug use by junior high kids has tripled, drug prices are at historic lows, drug purity is as high as ever and we still are not treating most of the millions of addicts desperate for help. ``It's time to do something different,'' said Sterling, whose group promotes innovative solutions to criminal justice problems. Sterling views the war on drugs as a 25-year experiment that showed prohibition wasn't the way to deal with the drug problem. So, experiment with other approaches. He might start with medical marijuana. Since pot is now outlawed, kids see it as titillating and exciting. But what if it becomes associated with people who are so sick that they're throwing up? Doesn't that take away some of the glamour? If heroin addicts were put on a clinical heroin maintenance program, couldn't they be directed toward treatment and put their energy into their jobs and families rather than stealing to buy drugs? Sterling thinks binge drinking got out of control when the drinking age was raised from 18 to 21. He'd reduce it again, even go to 16 for beer and wine, and teach kids about alcohol. There is a small step the Connecticut General Assembly can take that will help Hartford. Five years ago, the state opened its first drug court in New Haven. Nonviolent drug users are given an intensive yearlong program of counseling and treatment. The program has a remarkable 77 percent success record. Judge Simon ran it for three years. ``It takes addicts who've been taking up too much space in prisons, gives them treatment and lets them return to a productive life.'' Adult drug courts also are open in Waterbury and Bridgeport and a drug session for juveniles has begun in Hartford. State Rep. Art Feltman has proposed an adult drug court for Hartford Superior Court. It's a good step, but hopefully only a first step. Tom has been a columnist at The Courant since 1985. Hewrites about people and issues in Greater Hartford. You can e-mail Tom --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson