Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jan 2001 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2001 St. Petersburg Times Contact: 490 First Ave. S, St. Petersburg, FL 33701 Website: http://www.sptimes.com/ Forum: http://www.sptimes.com/Forums/ubb/cgi-bin/Ultimate.cgi Section: Page 12A, Columns Author: Barry McCaffrey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mccaffrey.htm DRUG WAR EFFORTS IN NEED OF REFORM As my five-year tenure as director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy draws to a close, I depart knowing we increased federal spending on prevention by 55 percent over the past four years. We funded anti-drug coalitions in 307 communities across the country and launched an unprecedented five-year, $2-billion anti- drug media campaign. This public health communication effort, conducted by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America and this agency, is a model of cooperation between the public and private sectors. Vulnerable youth are now receiving accurate information about the dangers posed by illegal drugs, and more parents are involved in substance abuse prevention. Use of illegal drugs by adolescents has declined 21 percent since 1997. The consequences of substance abuse are still devastating. We estimate at out 50,000 drug-related deaths occur each year. This figure includes more than 14,000 drug-induced deaths plus mortalities from drug-related causes. The National Institute on Drug Abuse estimates that illegal drugs account for $110- billion in expenses and lost revenue each year. The public health burden is shared by all of society, directly or indirectly. No wonder a recent Gallup poll found that 83 percent of the public view drugs as a "very" or "extremely" serious problem for the country. Nevertheless, the number of Americans who believe we are gaining ground against illegal drugs is higher than at any point since Gallup started asking the question in 1972. A consensus is emerging about what needs to be done. America has learned we can't arrest our way out of the drug problem. We've gone to extremes in limiting judicial discretion and over relying on mandatory sentences. The inequitable nature of federal cocaine sentencing laws is another problem among people convicted on crack cocaine charges, 90 percent are African-American. This disparity has fostered a perception of racial injustice within the criminal justice system. We must change from a predominantly punitive approach to a practical system that provides approximately 600,000 convicts released each year with a realistic chance of reintegration into society. That's why we brought together public health and public safety professionals from all branches of government to fashion sensible policies to break the cycle of drugs and crime. Transitional support for convicts must involve coordination among correctional treatment and other services and rehabilitation programs, like education and job training, parole supervision, halfway houses and self-help, peer-group initiatives that aid in rehabilitation. This approach is the only way to stop the revolving door for jails. Given that chronic drug users are caught up in the criminal justice system, we must continue expanding coerced abstinence programs --- such as drug courts, which have grown from just 12 in 1994 to more than 700 in operation or planning today. Nonviolent drug-law offenders who represent minimal threats to society should be able to avoid conviction by becoming drug free. Unfortunately, the policy discussion over drug-law enforcement has been distorted by the misperception that individuals are being locked up willy-nilly for minor possession offenses. During fiscal year 1998, only 33 federal defendants were imprisoned for offenses involving less than 5,000 grams of marijuana; 196 criminals were sentenced for crimes involving 1-million to 3-million grams of marijuana. Only 55 federal defendants were jailed for crimes involving 25 grams of powder cocaine or less. During this time, 749 federal defendants were sentenced for crimes involving 5,000 grams or more of cocaine, with 249 of these cases involving more than 150,000 grams. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, more than 70 percent of 222,100 state inmates serving time for drug offenses in July 1997 were incarcerated for drug trafficking as opposed to possession. More than 82 percent of the total state prison drug-offender population had prior criminal histories - one in four were violent recidivists. In Florida (according to its "drug czar'), only 40 of the more than 68,000 prisoners in the corrections system in July 1999 were incarcerated for a primary offense of marijuana possession. All had criminal histories; more than 60 percent had been in prison previously. We know that as a nation we are not doing enough to close the treatment gap - - defined as the difference between individuals who would benefit from treatment and those receiving it. We estimate that about 5-million drug users need immediate treatment while just 2-million receive it. Over the last decade, spending on substance-abuse prevention and treatment rose to an estimated $12.6-billion annually. Of this amount, public spending is estimated at $7.6-billion, with the federal government contributing about half this figure. This agency has sought to address many of the factors limiting treatment, including restrictive Policies and regulations and incomplete, knowledge of best practices. We have been staunch advocates for methadone therapy, which now reaches less than 25 percent Of the opiate addicts who could benefit from it. We persuaded the president to sign an executive order requiring health insurance policies for 9- million federal employees and family members to cover substance abuse treatment. Our five-year planning budget calls for an additional $25- billion for treatment. However, much more must be done by state and local governments as well as than private sector. Communities must develop the public-health infrastructure to deal with addicted sub-populations. This problem cannot be resolved by the federal government, alone. Some question the need for continued focus on the supply side of the equation, believing the answer, to the drug problem lies exclusively, in prevention and treatment. The phenomenon of Ecstasy is instructive in this regard. The University of Michigan's Monitoring the future study reports that Ecstasy use by,, 10th- and 12th-graders increased 40 percent over the past year while among eighth-graders, use increased 80 percent. The survey also noted the largest increase in perceived availability of any drug in its 26 years of canvassing. The supply of Ecstasy is driving up demand. Keeping illegal and dangerous substances out of the country is uniquely federal responsibility. Illegal drugs constitute less than one part in a million of total imports Finding them is like looking for a needle in a haystack, yet about a third of cocaine destined for U.S. markets is interdicted each year. Cocaine, heroin, Ecstasy, marijuana and methamphetamine would be much more readily available were if not for the concerted law enforcement effort to suppress trafficking. No community favors unfettered access to dangerous, addictive substances. Over the past five years, we have reinvigorated the national response to the drug problem. President Clinton and Vice President Al Gore have strongly supported our work. Our initiatives have also been advanced by a broad bipartisan congressional coalition. The involvement of governors, mayors, law enforcement, agencies, educators, coaches, athletes, corporate America, the advertising and entertainment industries, and private citizens has been instrumental in focusing renewed attention on illegal drugs. As a society, we've learned that we can't afford to take our eye off this ball. Barry McCaffrey is retiring director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Scripps Howard News Service - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens