Pubdate: Sun, 08 Apr 2001 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2001 Albuquerque Journal Contact: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/10 Author: Brendan Smith, Journal Staff Writer FUNDS TO BOOST DRUG TREATMENT Most of Gov. Gary Johnson's drug-reform package died in the Legislature, but one bill expected to have a major impact, at least for addicts seeking help, passed and was signed by Johnson last week. Senate Bill 628 provides $9.8 million in the first year of a three-year program to expand drug-treatment services for New Mexico residents and some male and female state prisoners. The funding should help from 2,100 to 2,500 substance abusers receive treatment. Under the bill, the state Health Department will receive: * $5 million to expand or create regional substance-abuse intervention, treatment and harm-reduction programs; * $1.8 million to expand statewide substance-abuse prevention programs for youths; * $1 million to create community reintegration programs in conjunction with the state Corrections Department for parolees with substance-abuse problems. The Corrections Department also will get $2 million for an alternative treatment program in a state prison and for residential treatment programs for some female ex-convicts. Communities In Need The Health Department spent about $32.4 million in state and federal funding this fiscal year on its substance-abuse prevention and treatment programs, which serve about 10,500 people, according to state analysts. The additional $7.8 million to the Health Department represents a 24 percent increase in substance-abuse funding. "What a great day," Health Department Secretary Alex Valdez said Thursday after the governor signed the treatment bill. "I think that treatment bill is really going to have a positive impact statewide." The Health Department will use its regional care coordination system to distribute $5 million for expanded drug-treatment and harm-reduction programs statewide, Valdez said. A needs assessment will help target where the money should be spent. Some of the funds may help expand the department's needle-exchange program and to purchase more Narcan, an injectable antidote for heroin overdoses, so law-enforcement officers can be trained in its use, Valdez said. Liability protection for law-enforcement officers who administer Narcan to help overdose victims was one of two other bills approved from Johnson's drug-reform package. So far, the Espanola Police Department is the only law-enforcement agency that has expressed interest in carrying Narcan syringes and training officers on how they might save an addict's life if they arrive before paramedics during an overdose call. The third approved bill allows pharmacists to sell syringes to addicts without fear of criminal prosecution. The governor's more ambitious drug-reform bills didn't survive the Legislature's regular session, including decriminalization of small amounts of marijuana, approval of marijuana use for some medical conditions, and reduced penalties for some drug offenses. The $9.8 million drug-treatment bill represents a turnabout for Johnson, who has vetoed $2.8 million in drug-treatment funding during his two terms in office, according to former U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey, who sparred with Johnson over drug reform on CNN last month. Addicts In Prison The treatment bill provides $1.5 million to the Corrections Department for residential treatment for women recently released from prison who have both substance-abuse and mental-health problems or women who want to live with their young children in the treatment facility, said Charles A. King, the department's director of addiction services. "I think it's really exciting. I think we're going to do a lot of good," he said Thursday. "The amount you invest in treatment as opposed to incarceration, you really get a much bigger bang for your buck." Stays in the planned women's treatment facilities, which most likely will be located in Albuquerque, will be voluntary and last about six months following a woman's prison sentence, King said. The programs not only will address women's substance-abuse problems but will help them with jobs, housing and other issues to ensure they succeed and do not return to prison, King said. "If we don't follow through, they are going to be back (in prison)," King said. "People ought not be going to prison if they primarily need treatment." Both male and female prisoners in New Mexico have more than a 60 percent recidivism rate, meaning at least six in 10 will return to prison for new crimes after their release, King said. An additional $500,000 from the treatment bill will create an alternative treatment center in one state prison where certain nonviolent prisoners and parole violators can receive treatment. About 60 percent of the state prison population has serious drug or alcohol addictions, King said. He hopes the new programs will reduce recidivism as low as 25 percent for the prisoners or parolees receiving treatment. The Corrections Department also will partner with the Health Department to develop a community reintegration center for male and female parolees where they could meet with parole officers, addiction specialists and support groups, King said. The one-stop center also could provide help with education, housing and job searches. Because 40 percent of the prison population is released to Bernalillo County, the center probably will be located in Albuquerque, although other centers could be added later in other cities if funding is available, King said. The Corrections Department already has an eight-bed halfway house for female parolees in Espanola and a 46-bed treatment facility for male parolees at Fort Stanton, where there has been more than an 80 percent graduation rate during the first year of the program, King said. Addicted Kids The treatment bill did not include an additional $1 million that the Legislative Finance Committee stated could help expand limited treatment options for drug-abusing adolescents. The Health Department typically has provided drug-treatment funding for adults, while the state Children, Youth and Families Department has helped administer Medicaid funds to aid drug-addicted youths. Health Department Secretary Valdez said that bureaucratic division will not stop the Health Department from providing drug treatment for youths with the new treatment funds. "If I've got an adolescent who is 16 years old who is sticking needles in his arm, we better figure out how to get that kid some treatment. That's what matters," Valdez said. The Health Department also will help fund local youth-development programs with the $1.8 million dedicated for youth-based drug-prevention programs, Valdez said. The Rocky Mountain Youth Corps in Taos has received Health Department funding in the past for its programs, which keep kids busy during the summer and prepare them for a future that doesn't include drugs, Valdez said. Local Programs While the governor's treatment bill will help expand drug treatment statewide, his veto Friday of the capital-outlay "pork" bill killed $500,000 in funding that would have helped Rio Arriba County buy the now-defunct Pinon Hills treatment facility in Velarde. Rio Arriba County has been hit hardest by the drug epidemic, blamed primarily on black-tar heroin smuggled north from Mexico. Last year, at least 16 people died of drug overdoses there. The county has the highest per capita rate of drug fatalities in the state, while New Mexico has led the nation. Rio Arriba County received $900,000 in federal funds last year for the pending purchase of the Velarde facility, where the county plans to offer residential substance-abuse treatment, a domestic-violence shelter and welfare-to-work programs. The county is in negotiations to purchase the 50-bed facility and surrounding property, which could cost more than $1.5 million. Lauren Reichelt, the county's health and human services director, said she is worried about the veto of the $500,000 in state funding but thinks the county will close the deal to buy the facility, even if all of the funding isn't yet in place. The Health Department's budget for the next fiscal year also includes about $1 million for the third year of treatment services in northern New Mexico by Arizona-based Amity Inc., Valdez said. Amistad, the name of Amity's local program based in Espanola, has provided outpatient drug counseling for residents and jail inmates in northern New Mexico. So will the increased funding help reduce the death toll from drugs in New Mexico? "It's going to make a difference. I can't tell you how much," Valdez said. "I'm really thankful to the governor and the legislators who sponsored the bills." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager