Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jul 2000 Source: Norman Transcript (OK) Copyright: 2000 The Norman Transcript Contact: P.O. Drawer 1058, Norman, OK 73070. Website: http://www.normantranscript.com/ DRUG COURT SHOWS PROMISE FOR TREATING OFFENDERS Transcript reporter Jane Glenn Cannon's feature story Sunday on the Cleveland County drug court called our attention to a program we knew little about, but one whose goals we highly approve. We don't think we're being bleeding hearts in opposing long-term incarceration for nonviolent drug- and alcohol-related offenses. It's expensive, and it doesn't appear to work very well if the goal is for the offender to become a sober, productive member of society. The drug court offers the individual a chance to avoid prison by changing the behavior and attitudes that brought him or her into the judicial system. It requires a time investment in following each defendant's progress, but it shows promise that the investment will pay off. As Ms. Cannon wrote, "This is a defendant under a microscope, behavior modification at its most intense. This is drug court, and its success rate is proportional to how personal it gets between each client and the court." Accepting responsibility for one's choices and taking control of one's own recovery are important aspects of the program. Drug court team member Steve Nelson told The Transcript, "For some of these people, this is the first time they've had to be accountable for their behavior." An example of the court's holding clients accountable was the man who missed his counseling appointment because it was raining and he didn't want to get wet, then showed up the following day without an appointment demanding to be seen. The drug court didn't let him get away with this rationalization, and rightly so, because a person who adopts the attitude that unfortunate circumstances wipe out the rules is not going to stay sober when misfortune hits - as assuredly it will, because bad luck, like the rain, falls on everybody. The Cleveland County drug court has only been in operation since February, so there are no statistics yet on how effective it is at turning people's lives around, but it's modeled on programs that have proved successful in treating habitual offenders whose main problem is substance abuse. What we've seen of the program so far gives us hope that it will prove equally successful here. - --- MAP posted-by: greg