Pubdate: Thu, 12 Apr 2001 Source: Augusta Chronicle, The (GA) Copyright: 2001 The Augusta Chronicle Contact: http://www.augustachronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/31 Author: Phil Kent Note: Does not publishing letters from outside of our immediate Georgia and South Carolina circulation area. The last two portions of this column are not drug policy related. DEATH SHOWS NEED FOR CHANGE IN WAR ON DRUGS KIMBERLY ANN GRAY was a 23-year-old Westside High School graduate from a fine family who died after four days in a coma. Police later arrested two young men in connection with her death. One of them is accused of giving the girl a prescription cough medicine which authorities say - and to me, this is incredible - she injected twice before collapsing. Sad to say, authorities know this was not the first time she and friends had dabbled with drugs. Such tragedies, which happen every day in communities large and small, remind us how illegal drugs ruin lives regardless of age, race, class or religion. Kimberly's death - and the deaths of a growing number of young people in our two-state area, especially those now using the Ecstasy drug - underscore a simple fact: Demand, not supply, drives the drug trade. It remains irritating to this observer that all too many police and prosecutors don't want to target petty drug users. They want to go after ``the big guys.'' More and more cases involving small amounts of cocaine and heroin are even being dismissed in Georgia, South Carolina and other states. This reflects society's growing ambivalence toward drugs. Everyone deplores ``drug kingpins'' and ``drug gangs'' - but few want to call for hard time for all users, because that could include a son or daughter. Yet the problem exists because these very ``kids'' are craving mind-altering illegal drugs. Jail time for young users could be an effective deterrent; it would diminish demand which would drive some big suppliers out of business. But there's a dilemma. Many young people in their late teens and early 20s likely to be arrested for possession and use are ``kids'' that society is reluctant to jail. Maybe if more young users were locked away for a short time - while simultaneously getting help and treatment - society might save future Kimberly Ann Grays from addiction. There is not enough jail space, you say? True enough, in some parts of the country. But when we keep giving second and third-time chances to the ``small-time'' user, America's drug problem will never go away. Is Sue In Hot Water? GEORGIA HOUSE Speaker Pro Tem Jack Connell, D-Augusta, was stunned to read the following paragraph on legislative redistricting in The Columbia News-Times quoting state Rep. Sue Burmeister, R-Augusta: ``Burmeister says Democrat Jack Connell won't run again, so other Democrats will cannibalize his district for the numbers they need to keep their own seats safe, while cutting out the Republicans and putting them in Burmeister's district.'' When asked if this report that he's not running is true, Connell said ``absolutely not.'' Then he shot back, ``I have certainly never discussed this subject with Ms. Burmeister.'' The truth is that freshman Burmeister, who says she basically spent the past session ``observing and learning,'' is worried that the 114th House District she represents will be altered. For one thing, some legislators are irked that she doesn't keep her word. Burmeister, for example, burned Sen. Charles Walker, D-Augusta, by signaling him her position on an optometry bill and then voting just the opposite. For another, will Republican and Democratic friends of former Rep. Robin Williams, R-Augusta, on the House Reapportionment Committee tweak the 114th's lines to make it more favorable for a Williams electoral comeback? Several Democrats and Republicans on that panel also tell this columnist it is extremely unlikely there would be any plan to extend that district from Augusta into Columbia County. And, oh yes. Democrats on that panel say it would be absurd to think they would not instinctively move to preserve Democrat leader Connell's 115th District seat. Jockeying For Marshal RICHMOND COUNTY is one of the few Georgia counties boasting of a marshal, whose duties include everything from serving warrants to executing evictions. Under a new law, this public servant is to now be elected countywide. So incumbent Steve Smith is being challenged by veteran Augusta cop Moses McCauley and sheriff's investigator John Gray. Smith, who has ably held the post for the past decade, should have a leg up on the other two political unknowns. The affable incumbent has scored points in recent years for strenuously urging better Municipal Building security, and he has tried to crack down on litter even when city fathers wouldn't back him. Qualifying for the position with the Board of Elections begins in September. Fund-raising had better begin now for Smith, if he is to fend off these two and possibly more challengers. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk