Pubdate: Sun, 22 Jul 2001 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Section: Commentary, Pg 3 Copyright: 2001, The Tribune Co Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Author: James R. McDonough Note: McDonough is director, Florida Office of Drug Control Ref: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1230/a04.html DRUG TREATMENT LAW WOULD EFFECTIVELY LEGALIZE DRUG USE Regarding the editorial by The Tampa Tribune, "A drug treatment law worth watching" (July 9): It is worth watching, all right, for it offers anything but effective treatment. The proposed constitutional amendment would be more accurate titled "Right to use Drugs." It legalizes, de facto, the possession, purchase and use of all drugs - crack cocaine, heroin, methamphetamines, marijuana, cocaine, Ecstasy, and otherwise controlled pharmaceuticals such as the powerful and deadly oxycodone and fentanyl. This provision stands the law on its head by creating a free pass for the repeated commission of felonies occurring with the purchase, possession and use of Schedule I controlled substances listed in Florida Statute section 893, (i.e., dangerous and illegal drugs). It removes any sense of personal responsibility for the individual being treated. Treatment is defined as a "right": indeed, use of the word "right" is stressed and repeated throughout the length of the amendment. While the taxpayer is given an obligation to pay for treatment, the drug abuser is held to no requirement to refrain from using drugs or to see treatment through to successful completion. Successful outcomes are not demanded and therefore cannot be expected. The offender needs only to put in his or her time without concern for outcomes. As the amendment reads, success or 18 months - "whichever comes first" - is the only requirement necessary to permit the individual to be excused from prosecution, sentencing, or continuing court supervision. In this manner, the amendment would render moot the entire Florida drug court system by removing the strong incentives of the criminal justice system to stay the course, as there would be no penalties for failure. An offender may demand treatment, as a right, at any time, from the moment of being charged with the offense through conviction and sentencing. In so doing, at one fell swoop the ability for the drug court to monitor or supervise the progress of the "client" is removed. What is left is an unfunded mandate that will lead to increased crime in Florida while ensuring that fewer of our addicted population receive effective treatment. Personal responsibility is completely removed from the equation. In short, what remains is a cynical, imported ballot initiative that would normalize the use of drugs, confound the law in any attempt to curtail drug abuse and its felonious consequences, and remove the one element from treatment that all professionals agree is tantamount to success - strong incentive to get and stay clean of drugs. The authors of the amendment ignore the fact that Florida has developed effective treatment systems and over the past two years has increased treatment funding by almost $100 million. Instead they seek to achieve through the referendum process that which they could not hope to achieve through the normal legal process by which the state Legislature passes laws. The amendment, by its use of sophistry, internally contradictory passages, disregard of the benefits of the already established drug court system and Florida's strides in providing significant addiction treatment, and emotional manipulation seeks to confound and confuse the good common sense of Florida citizens. This outright chicanery offers the voters an illusion of treatment while concealing its true purpose - the normalization of drug abuse in the state of Florida. It is, beyond any reasonable doubt, a hoax on the citizens of Florida by non-Floridians who have targeted us to advance their own, not our, interests. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth