Pubdate: Mon, 19 Mar 2001
Source: U.S. News and World Report (US)
Copyright: 2001 U.S. News & World Report
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Section: Business & Technology
Author: Vince Beiser

ADDICTIONS

The Dark Side Of The Boom

At first glance, Tim, 33, seems like any dot-com drone, putting in long 
hours and pulling down big bucks building Web sites for an Internet 
business. Recently, he worked three 30-hour stints in a single week.

But it's not just six figures and stock options that keep Tim going. When 
his workload gets overwhelming, Tim cranks up on methamphetamine, sometimes 
for weeks at a stretch. "I go home late, have a bite, crash for a few 
hours, and go back," he says. "Then I take the weekends off and just sleep."

The tech world's wired work habit rivals the cocaine craze that swept 
stock-trading circles in the 1980s. A growing number of tech workers have 
serious drug problems­stimulants such as meth and cocaine, mostly­and the 
trend may be worsening, along with the sector's economic fortunes.

Help menu. "The way companies are folding right now, it's do or die," says 
an executive at a Silicon Valley start-up who is herself a recovering 
cocaine addict. "We're working our engineers around the clock­and it's not 
coffee that's keeping them up." And even when workers lose their jobs, some 
keep their drug habits, says Dr. Alex Stalcup, medical director of the New 
Leaf Treatment Center in Concord, Calif., where dozens of digital-economy 
workers check in every month. "It goes from 'I need drugs to stay awake' to 
'Life sucks;I want to get high.' " Drug treatment professionals report that 
tech workers, a type they rarely saw, now form a growing part of their 
clientele. One company, e-getgoing.com, is even developing an online drug 
treatment program targeting dot-com addicts.

There aren't yet any major studies showing whether drug use is more 
prevalent among tech workers than other professionals. But high-tech meccas 
are becoming drug bazaars. Police seizures of meth have soared in the 
Silicon Valley area in recent years. In Durham, one corner of North 
Carolina's Research Triangle, police confiscations of cocaine have doubled 
in the past two years, and meth seizures went from zero to 6.4 pounds.

The long hours, high pay, and young staff make the tech world fertile 
breeding ground for drug abuse. Its freewheeling atmosphere makes getting 
high at work easy. Few dot coms test employees for drugs. On-the-job drug 
use is particularly risk free for the many programmers who work from home 
or at odd hours. "I have clients who go in at midnight, do coke, and work 
until 6 a.m.," says Dr. Arnold Washton, a New York-based addiction 
psychologist who treats many tech professionals. As anxiety replaces 
arrogance in growing numbers of tech workers, those drug-fueled midnight 
shifts may be getting busier.
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