Pubdate: Wed, 25 Jul 2001 Source: High Times Online (US Web) Copyright: 2001 Trans-High Corporation Website: http://www.hightimes.com/ Author: Daniel Forbes, , Special to HighWitness News Note: MAP does not normally post and archive items from Cannabis Culture and High Times, and never yet from their websites only. We believe that a large segment of our readers either read the magazines or visit the websites, so that for us to post the items would be redundant. Besides, there are so many good items it would be impossible to select just some for posting. However, we make an exception for this report by investigative reporter Dan Forbes, co-recipient of the 2001 Edward M. Brecher Award for Achievement in the Field of Journalism. Cited: The Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation http://www.drugpolicy.org/ Common Sense for Drug Policy http://www.csdp.org/ Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/forbes.htm (Forbes, Daniel) http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) PROP 36: THE DEVIL IS IN THE DETAILS Proposition 36, the California law ordaining treatment instead of jail for drug users, went into effect July 1. But will some counties just use it to slam people into jail if they fail a urine test? As ever, the devil is in the details. California's Proposition 36-designed to divert 36,000 small-time drug offenders a year from incarceration to treatment-was inaugurated July 1. But drug users might want to consider their locale along with what they put into their bodies. Control of how to implement the initiative the state's voters passed by a 61%-39% margin last November falls to local authorities, and each one of the state's 58 counties has a different plan-with some still emphasizing punishment over treatment. At least that's the case made by a formal assessment of 11 California counties with 75% of the state's population issued by one of the main Prop 36 proponents. The Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation, a private, non-profit reform organization, issued its assessment, complete with a traditional 'A' through 'F' letter grading system, in late June. While some counties go to the head of the class-primarily San Francisco and San Mateo-San Bernardino received a failing grade. And, by Lindesmith's lights, Sacramento, San Diego and Santa Clara just squeaked by. Broadly speaking, Lindesmith judged the counties based on whether they followed what it terms the will of the voters. That is, did the counties emphasize a public-health model, or is a criminal-justice tail wagging the treatment dog in their approach to offenders arrested for the first or second time for possession? According to Lindesmith's analysis of the plans the 11 counties filed with the state Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs (after being approved by the counties' boards of supervisors), San Diego, Sacramento and San Bernardino counties devote too much money to the supervisory aspect of diversion and let too much money fall under the control of county probation departments. Conversely, by Lindesmith's lights, more liberal counties such as San Francisco and San Mateo, correctly emphasize treatment options that operate at some remove from the criminal-justice system. The counties, including also Alameda, Orange and Los Angeles, that get a Lindesmith 'A' or 'B' have a high degree of respect for client confidentiality, autonomy and integrity, and see drug tests as a therapeutic rather than punitive tool, says Lindesmith. Its critique underscores the fact that the initiative does afford a fair bit of interpretative wiggle room. Theoretical wrangling over punishment versus treatment aside, the struggle over divvying up $660 million over the next five years in guaranteed, lock-boxed state funds is as basic as it gets. "This is a fight over money and jobs and operational control, yes," says Whitney A. Taylor, Lindesmith's Prop 36 implementation director. "A shift of resources from one official body to another, from law enforcement to public health." Chronically underfunded probation departments have requested up to two-thirds of Prop 36 monies, though they typically have marginal oversight of nonviolent mere users. Similarly underfunded treatment providers, of course, are eager to slice the pie differently, mindful that one traditional way for them to acquire funds has been to get into bed with the criminal-justice system. Speaking at the annual Lindesmith-DPF conference held this June in Albuquerque, Dorsey Nunn, program director of San Francisco's Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, declared, "That half a billion dollars-it doesn't belong to the police. I don't care if the cops ever get new police cars." California Governor Gray Davis opposed the initiative and adopted a hands-off approach after its passage. This despite the fact that the state's rate of 115 drug defendants incarcerated per 100,000 population is more than twice the national average. With incarceration costing some $24,000 a year versus -- depending on the modality -- treatment's average $4,000 a year cost, diverting 36,000 offenders annually will save an estimated $1.5 billion in the law-enforcement and corrections budgets over the program's five-year life. That lost money only pours gasoline on the struggle over Prop 36 funds, especially in a state with scant additional money for anything but electricity. (There's also a projected one-time, $500 million savings from not having to build a new prison.) There's been much grumbling at the county level that the $120 million a year guaranteed by the voters will prove insufficient to the task. Dell Sayles-Owen, deputy director of California's Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs and head of its Office of Criminal Justice Collaboration, admits that the state doesn't know in an "empirical way" how much will be needed, "and there are fears among some of our stakeholders in the counties that it won't be enough." Following what Taylor described as Gov. Davis' hands-off approach (one, it should be noted, that is consistent with California's tradition of local control), the state ADP department provided scant concrete guidance in drafting the plans, though ADP did subsequently approve them. Given the regulatory vacuum, each of the 58 counties was free to determine how to divvy up its share of the money. "The state ADP took such a hands-off approach, we basically have 58 different plans," says Taylor. "Even a simple state cap on the percentage allocated for non-treatment expenses would have been worthwhile." That view was not echoed by Sayles-Owen. Referring to the breakdown of monies between treatment and supervision, she said, "The law doesn't specify, nor do our regulations specify. Local decisions are left to the counties on how much to allocate to criminal justice versus treatment." As it was this spring, the contest will be fought annually at the county level, with probation departments, the cops and the courts struggling to maintain budgetary and operational control, while Prop 36 advocates strive to enforce what they view as voters' intent to beef up California's treatment infrastructure. As Taylor told the Lindesmith-DPF conference, "There are 58 different fights in 58 counties. Opponents of Prop 36 -- judges, prosecutors, sheriffs -- in each county you have the foxes guarding the hen house." The Prop 36 implementation battles expected in California over the next months and years bear watching elsewhere in the country, as Americans grow ever-wearier of locking up their sons and fathers, mothers and daughters in a 30-year Drug War that shows no signs of ending. The same troika of millionaire drug-policy reformers -- George Soros, Peter Lewis and John Sperling -- who backed the initiative (and, in Soros' case, fund Lindesmith) has indicated they intend to push similar treatment-over-incarceration ballot initiatives in Michigan, Florida and Ohio in the 2002 elections. Given that they don't proceed in the absence of polls indicating a likely success-and that this June, an ABC News poll found that 69% of Americans favor treatment over jail for first and second-time drug offenders-similar initiatives will soon crop up around the country, mimicking the spread of the medical-marijuana initiatives funded by the three men. What's more, even President Bush has called for $1.6 billion in new federal money for drug treatment. While issuing letter grades is a nice conceptual technique appealing to the press and public alike, a private group's ability to steer recalcitrant counties in their direction remains to be seen. In fact, Sayles-Owen said that one county she declined to identify called her concerned about Lindesmith's critique, but it was a moot point since she'd decided that very day to approve its plan. Regardless of the response, Lindesmith certainly plans on invoking last November's huge Prop 36 victory. "With 61% if the vote, you can afford to throw your weight around," Taylor says. Asked the utility of a private group critiquing the plans, Taylor responds, "We were among the original proponents of Prop 36. We don't want to be seen as a group that helps institute new laws and then leaves without trying to guarantee success." Noting that the counties will retool their plans with each annual appropriation, she adds, "We want to try to help voters take action with this information." Toni Moore, Sacramento County alcohol and drug administrator, declares Lindesmith's effort interesting, and says she understood their interest and motivation, since they're, "in essence, the authors of Prop 36. They want to see it as they envisioned it." The report card analyzed the county plans based on four parameters, starting naturally with money. Lindesmith looked first at the proportion of money earmarked for treatment versus such non-treatment costs as probation, law enforcement and the courts. They declare that 17%, or $20 million, is "sufficient to supplement established county administrative and criminal-justice systems." Money beyond that 17% level is "stolen from treatment and endangers the success of Prop 36," Lindesmith charges. The second parameter was the availability of various treatment options, ranging from education and prevention to outpatient treatment and halfway houses; from methadone-maintenance therapy to in-patient treatment, including detox. (Literacy training and family and vocational counseling are also to be provided under Prop 36 funds when needed.) "Docs or cops" is what Lindesmith terms the relative operational prominence of public health versus law enforcement. That is, do public-health professionals take the lead in assessment and case management; is urine testing used as a therapeutic rather than as a punitive tool to kick someone out of the program or revoke probation; and are public-health officials basically calling the shots? In an analysis yet to be released, Lindesmith asserts that Prop 36 shifts the locus of responsibility for eligible offenders from prosecutors, judges, and probation and corrections personnel to public-health officials. The group believes this redefinition of their respective roles requires law enforcement to defer to public-health officials. "We have to make sure that Prop 36 is not just co-opted into the criminal-justice system and that it doesn't just become another Drug War tool," says Taylor. As to whether public-health officials need the preponderance of control, Sayles-Owen says, "Prop 36 is a sentencing-law change, and it's appropriate that the criminal-justice system is heavily involved." A lot will depend on the quality of the working relationship among the various public officials in individual counties, she added. There was even defiant, albeit informal, talk at the Lindesmith-DPF conference in Albuquerque of treatment providers just plain failing to inform probation departments of failed drug tests. Treatment advocates worry both that even a couple of failed tests will revoke a client's probation and send him or her off to jail for one to three years. Wanting Prop 36 monies to be used for treatment rather than drug tests, the law doesn't provide any money for testing. But judges can still order it and even make defendants pay for it. An $18 million allocation for drug testing passed the state Senate and is currently languishing in the Assembly. Gov. Davis announced in April that $11.9 million in new federal funds would go, in part, to pay for testing. And counties are providing their own funds, with Sacramento ponying up $400,000 and San Diego laying out $1.2 million. Will any undue emphasis on urine tests just mean more of the same for addicts battling a disease: two or three failed tests and you're out? Reformers say the individual's attendance and participation in treatment is of more importance than a failed test. Taylor asserts that treatment professionals typically know when clients are still using, and that urine tests can be used not to kick someone out of a program, but to parade someone's continued dependence before them. On the other hand, she says, if someone is truly unamenable to treatment, "if they're disruptive or showing up high every day," then she believes they should be terminated from that particular program. The report card's fourth parameter was community involvement, including such issues as whether publicized community forums were held and whether public-health officials and even "consumers" were included on the task forces drawing up the implementation plans. Neither membership on the 58 committees nor their subsequent decisions came easy. As Taylor told the Albuquerque conference, "Treatment professionals were on the task forces drawing up the county plans, but they lacked power compared to the law-enforcement folks fighting for a piece of the money." Extra credit not reflected in the overall grade was given to Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Francisco counties, because their district attorneys issued charging guidelines which hopefully will lessen the sort of deliberate overcharging that makes defendants ineligible. Offenders convicted of anything from an ill-defined intent-to-distribute charge to resisting arrest to even loitering or trespassing in some derelict crackhouse are ineligible for Prop 36 diversion. As for marijuana, California potheads convicted of possession of personal-use amounts typically don't face any jail time. Taylor told the Lindesmith-DPF conference, "It's up to the DA what constitutes personal use. If you have only two grams, but it's in two separate baggies, that can be said to be intent to distribute." Said Doug McVay, research director for Common Sense for Drug Policy, a Washington-based drug-law-reform group, "California has a horribly racially biased and unbalanced criminal justice system." Given no articulated demarcation between possession and dealing, he added, "I imagine that most Prop 36 defendants will be white. Prosecutors have that discretion, and it gets abused." State official Sayles-Owen would only say cryptically: "There is the possibility of behavior-changing effects of Prop 36. Will DAs continue to charge cases the same way? My observation to that is we were told we'll see changes. The law says who is eligible. The big question mark is decisions regarding plea bargaining." She would not specify what changes in DA behavior she anticipates. Dorsey Nunn, who's African-American, was less cryptic. He told the Lindesmith conference, "The DA is not going to jump up and down and sprinkle frou-frou dust on my homeboys." By all these criteria, San Francisco got an A and San Mateo an A-. Alameda and Orange counties got Bs and Los Angeles a B-. Fresno and Riverside got Cs, and Santa Clara and San Diego D+s. Sacramento sleazed by with a D. San Bernardino got the sole F; Lindesmith declared that its plan "fails voters" and lacks any "commitment to quality treatment," but, rather with an undue "bolstering of criminal justice programs," it has "an implementation plan that is likely to fail." According to Lindesmith's reading of San Bernardino's plan filed with the state ADP, only a "meager 57%" of the money already allocated funds treatment. (Of the county's $7.4 million in Prop 36 money, $2 million remains unallocated.) Noting positively that public-health officials are designated the lead agency, Lindesmith condemned what it sees as "all other aspects of Prop 36 implementation have been designated to criminal-justice players." Saying that the task force that designed the plan was skewed too heavily to criminal-justice representatives, Lindesmith also condemned what it terms no "consumer or community" input. Finally -- the only San Bernardino parameter not to receive a failing grade -- its treatment options got a C. Saying that Lindesmith had no idea how far the conservative, "law and order" county had come, Bob Hillis, San Bernardino's alcohol and drug program administrator, said, "I don't care what they think of our plan. And I say that without malice -- I respect the Lindesmith people. It's just we're not in the same place as San Francisco or some other northern county. We're fairly conservative and criminal-justice oriented." Hillis also said, that while there was some wrangling with the state ADP department over the county's lack of details, it was by design: "Only half of the money is in contracts now -- the majority of our planning is ahead of us." That's partly because, at 20,000 square miles, it's the nation's largest county outside Alaska, and he wants to be able to move money around the county where needed. As to Lindesmith's criticism of the criminal justice component, Hillis said state money is $6 million and the county is kicking in another $5 million. "So if we're spending $6 million on treatment, that's all of the Prop 36 budget." That figure includes 100 new residential beds, and he said there will be more. "We don't know who is going to show up; all the counties are guessing." His ballpark figure for San Bernardino is 6,500 eligible clients. They'll be served, says Hillis, by approximately 35 new probation officers whose role is to move clients through the court process. But case decisions will be made by a multidisciplinary team, probation just a part. He wouldn't say who'll make the final decision when team members disagree. He sees the county's well-established drug courts, which serve 800 to 1000 offenders per year as an integral part of the Prop 36 treatment continuum. "Drug courts have additional ways of intervening, a weekend in jail to make it real, help them detox, calm down and continue with recovery," says Hillis. Finally, he admits that, "Lindesmith disappointed me. One real hope of this is the state has invested money in a research component to follow outcomes. Why bother if Lindesmith has already decided what works?" Declaring Sacramento "dangerously unprepared," Lindesmith castigated it for devoting only 54% of its budget to treatment. But Toni Moore, the county alcohol and drug administrator, responds, "The main point of Prop 36 is treatment as an alternative to incarceration. But the other piece is the voters voted for court-supervised treatment, and probation is the arm of the court that provides supervisory services." She noted that Lindesmith's own polling indicated that voters would support treatment only with court supervision. Moore said that probation currently has little oversight of Sacramento's estimated 3,100 eventual participants, and that, over time, the department would hire 14 new probation officers, one supervisor and one clerk. Probation will get 35% of the Prop 36 monies, with another 5% going to criminal-justice administrative needs, such as computerized information systems. The only modification the state ADP requested, said Moore, was more detail on community input and how the program will affect different communities. Though Lindesmith gave Sacramento an F on "community voices," stating the only involvement was focus groups held by treatment providers, Moore pointed to a series of what she termed multidisciplinary working groups that involved treatment providers, mental health and employment services. One fear for reformers, particularly in the counties where Lindesmith perceives large measures of control to reside with probation, is that drug tests will be used as a punitive rather than therapeutic tool. Like the other county ADP administrators interviewed, Moore says clients should remain in the same program if they have "one or two" failed tests as long as they're present and participating. She adds, "You have to give people the opportunity to succeed, with intervention and adjustment to treatment levels if necessary. But not with a knee-jerk reaction to a failed drug test." Sacramento's district attorney did not issue guidelines to prevent the kind of overcharging that disqualifies offenders who've somehow ticked the cops off. Moore says that shouldn't be a problem: "There are enough real customers to go around. Plus, so many individuals in law enforcement believe in treatment and have stated their frustration that it's not available." Saying that she's had contact with Lindesmith "off and on," Moore says they evaluated a draft plan that wasn't yet approved. "In my view, it's unfair and sets an adversarial tone that I don't think is helpful. To say we're 'dangerously unprepared,' misrepresents the reality. We're prepared in a way that they disagree with." Despite her annoyance with Lindesmith, Moore concluded, "I think Prop 36 is a great opportunity -- I think it's a bold thing they pushed through. It's bold, it's smart, I support it." San Diego received a D+. Noting that the county has the second highest rate of heroin overdose deaths in the state after San Francisco, Lindesmith slammed it (deducting 10 points) for what it termed lack of access to methadone treatment. It stated, "By denying Prop 36 clients access to methadone maintenance, though available in the county, San Diego is practicing a potentially deadly discrimination." Al Medina, administrator for alcohol and drug services for San Diego County, declares that comment a "misreading and a misunderstanding" of the fact that the state provides the five available clinics; they're not contracted for by the county. "Prop 36 defendants will have access like anyone else," he says, adding that he was not contacted by Lindesmith prior to their critique. Although San Diego received a decent mark for its budgetary priorities, with 79% of its budget geared for treatment, Lindesmith did wonder about the hiring of 45 new probation officers. "With 80% of the money going to treatment, where the heck will they get the money for 45 new probation officers?" Taylor asks. Medina says that the new probation staff will consume 22% or less of Prop 36 monies, leaving some 80% for treatment. That expenditure, he contends, "reflects a balance between public health and public safety. It's important to have an appropriate level of supervision for court-ordered treatment." Medina adds that along with supervising and monitoring the 5,000 to 6,000 cases he expects annually, probation officers will also do initial screening and assessment, along with new alcohol and drug specialists who will report to the probation department. Lindesmith decried the county's public-health professionals' lack of control of the program. Unsure about any "conversations" between Lindesmith and the state ADP department, Medina did call ADP, but was told there were "no implications" to the report. Saying San Diego's effort is accountable to the state, he says, "We aren't putting any particular merit or weight to what is a private, external group." "The first year will be very telling, and we reserve the right to look at performance and local decisions," state honcho Sayles-Owen acknowledges. In reply to a question, she declares the whole effort "quite the experiment, yes." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake