Pubdate: Thu, 10 May 2001 Source: Scripps Howard News Service (US Wire) Copyright: 2001 Scripps Howard Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/407 Author: John Hill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) MANY WORRY PROBATION OFFICES GET TOO MUCH FUNDING SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Backers of the initiative that puts drug offenders in treatment programs instead of prison are warning that some county probation offices are swallowing too much of the $120 million pie. One of their prime examples is Sacramento County, where more than a third of the money set aside for Proposition 36 will go to the county probation department. "Based on what I know, Sacramento County is the highest at this point," said Bill Zimmerman, executive director of the Campaign for New Drug Policies in Santa Monica and the campaign manager for Proposition 36. Zimmerman and other initiative backers say the probation departments are creating unnecessary work for themselves in an attempt to get money to beef up their inadequate budgets. That money will cut into the treatment programs at the heart of the initiative, they say. Proposition 36 offenders are not dangerous and don't need that kind of supervision, Zimmerman said. "Public safety is not the main concern for this population," he said. "Curing drug addiction is the main concern." Sacramento County takes a different view. A group of criminal justice officials decided to give probation a significant role to make sure that the initiative doesn't erode public safety. On Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors approved the group's plan, including the hiring of 14 new probation officers, a supervisor and a clerk. The law requires the new staff to be used only for the Proposition 36 offenders, said Toni Moore, Sacramento County's alcohol and drug administrator. Steve DeRoss, the county's assistant chief probation officer, said Sacramento County's plan "balances the needs of public safety and treatment. To do it right, you need the accountability and you need someone there to make sure the people are going to the treatment and being drug-tested." Proposition 36 was approved by 61 percent of voters in November. It calls for first-or second-time non-violent drug offenders to get treatment instead of time behind bars. The law goes into effect July 1, and counties are gearing up to handle a swell of offenders. The initiative calls for funding of $120 million a year, but doesn't spell out exactly how much can be spent for services other than treatment. San Francisco is spending only 5 percent on probation. Santa Clara County is also using very little for probation, relying instead on the treatment programs themselves to update the courts electronically about how offenders are faring, Zimmerman said. San Diego County initially wanted half to go to probation, but has since reduced the amount to a quarter, he said. Sacramento County's probation department will get 34 percent in the first year and 40 percent in the second. Overall, the county will receive $4.2 million a year of the Proposition 36 money, but plans to use other sources to boost the annual budget to $5.5 million. Around the state, probation and drug treatment officials have been skirmishing over the allocation, a battle made especially fierce because both services have been perennially cash-starved. "Both have been inadequately funded from the get-go," Moore said. "Then put in something like this and in essence underfund it, and naturally it sets up that kind of struggle." The Lindesmith Center, a drug policy reform organization, sent a letter to the state Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs in March asking director Kathryn Jett to limit counties to spending 16.7 percent of their allocations on things other than treatment. Jett declined to take such an action, saying she prefers to give the counties flexibility. There's also some question about whether she has the authority to impose such a cap. Proposition 36 backers say it may take action by the Legislature, which is unlikely to get involved until there's a track record. In Sacramento, the probation department will use the money to assess how risky offenders are to the community, make sure they comply with treatment and keep the courts updated. Some probation officers will have offices at the treatment centers, DeRoss said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D