Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jul 2001 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 2001 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 FROM IDEA TO SYSTEM Californians voted overwhelmingly last fall to send nonviolent drug users to treatment instead of jail, beginning July 1, whether the state was ready or not. As The Bee's special report on Proposition 36 showed this week, voters may have asked too much, too soon. California enters the Proposition 36 era with an inadequate network of drug treatment providers and a flimsy system for regulating them. The initiative will divert 3,000 more drug offenders a month into a drug treatment system that already has 5,000 users a month on waiting lists. Unlike the situation in most big states, counselors aren't required to be licensed and treatment programs aren't previously required to be certified. Even residential treatment, which the state licenses, is assessed only for health or safety, and not whether they are effective in helping patients wean themselves off drugs. In short, Proposition 36 is probably headed for a rocky shakedown cruise. Inevitably, there will be some foul-ups, scandals and a lot of wasted money. But elected officials, at both the state and local level, have a duty to make the measure work. The 61 percent of the vote won last year by Proposition 36 sent a signal across the nation that Californians are weary of a drug war that has no end in sight. They want to try moving from jailing the drug problem to curing it. Like a lot of initiatives, Proposition 36 signaled voters' desire for a policy shift without providing all the tools to make it happen. Now policy-makers must fill in behind. They need to license counselors and programs. They need to put in performance standards for treatment programs as a way to be sure that those receiving the extra $600 million the initiative puts into the system are delivering services, not just collecting a check. They need to supply money for drug testing so that drug users and programs alike can be held accountable. And while they do, citizens will need to be patient. It will take a lot of attention and time to make California's rickety drug treatment system effective, efficient and accountable. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe