Pubdate: Sun, 01 Jul 2001 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 2001 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Author: Laura Mecoy, Bee Los Angeles Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) PAST MEETS PRESENT FOR STATE DRUG CHIEF A Recovering Addict, Kathryn Jett Brings Compassion And Understanding To Her Position. Kathryn Jett hadn't planned to speak at the Sacramento drug treatment conference -- much less admit that she had once been an addict herself. But a cold forced the state Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs director to cancel a planned flight to Los Angeles. So she decided to speak at the Dec. 18 conference kicking off state planning for Proposition 36, the initiative requiring treatment instead of prison for non-violent drug offenders. Jett told the crowd the day was significant for more than one reason: It was the same date she'd "wandered" into a drug treatment program in Bucks County, Pa., 29 years before. She said nothing more at the time, and she hasn't spoken publicly about it since. "It was the first time I have ever made a public statement," the director told The Bee in a recent interview. "People don't know me as a recovering heroin addict but as a hard-working, tenacious public servant." That is exactly what the 48-year-old director looked like when she sat down for the interview. Her blond hair is cut short. She wore a simple blue suit, a white open-collared shirt, sensible shoes and an earnest manner. She didn't want to talk about her addiction or recovery because she didn't want to be known as "Kathy Jett, recovering heroin addict." But her past is one of the reasons treatment providers and county officials heralded Jett's appointment as the leader of the agency overseeing Proposition 36. "We are delighted, just delighted," said Maureen Bauman, Placer County alcohol and drug administrator. "There was no state leadership for a very long period of time, and she's just been a breath of fresh air. Her background has been particularly helpful." Robert Kahn, president of the California Organization of Methadone Providers, said Jett is "exactly what we need right now." But he criticized Gov. Gray Davis for leaving the agency adrift for two years without a director. Davis named Jett to the job two days after voters approved Proposition 36 in November. Douglas Anglin, director of the University of California, Los Angeles, Drug Abuse Research Center, said he's worried that the governor, who opposed Proposition 36 until voters approved it, will hobble Jett. "She's playing the title role in 'Traffic' in California," Anglin said, referring to the movie about the nation's drug war. "It's an almost hopeless situation." Jett insists the Governor's Office has supported her at every turn, and she believes Davis waited to find "the right person for the job." She has experience in law enforcement and drug treatment, the two fields that must work together to make Proposition 36 work. In her 24 years in California, Jett has been director of the state attorney general's Crime and Violence Prevention Center, chief of the state's first Office of Women's Health and an analyst at the department she now leads. It is much more than she ever envisioned when she was growing up in a working-class family in Pennsylvania. The youngest of three children, she recalls her parents struggling to achieve the "American dream" of homeownership. To achieve that dream, they had to move to Levittown, Penn., a community caught in the tumult of the '60s. Fights frequently broke out at Jett's new school. Police accompanied by German shepherds patrolled the grounds, and illegal drugs were abundant. "Although it was the American dream for my parents, it was the American nightmare for me," Jett said. Shortly after the move, Jett's father's leg was amputated because of diabetic complications. It was the first time she saw her "big steelworker" father cry. "That took so much hope out of my life," she recalled. Her father's health continued to decline, and her home life was in constant crisis. She was angry, hurt and confused, and turned to alcohol and pills when she was just 12, she said. As she got older, she discovered harder narcotics, including heroin. "My energy, which I had a lot of, went completely into sustaining an addiction," Jett said. "I had to sell drugs. I had to buy drugs. That was my lifestyle. I didn't know there was any other choice." On Dec. 18, 1971, at the age of 18, she visited some friends who were patients at a drug treatment center, and they confronted her about her own addiction. "I knew I was an addict, but that was my life goal at that point," she said. "I had no hope there was anything else in my life." Jett spent six months in the residential program. With the exception of a few slips, she said she has been drug-free ever since. And now, 24 years after she first came to California, the woman who once had no hope for her future has great hope and confidence not only about her future but about the future of the agency she took over just eight months ago. "I feel like I have been in training my entire life to do this job," Jett said. "I have an understanding of addiction, a compassion for families and addicts that not many people have, and a firm belief that treatment works." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk