Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jan 2002 Source: Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (CA) Copyright: 2002 Inland Valley Daily Bulletin Contact: http://www.dailybulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/871 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) MAKING PROP. 36 PLAN WORK NOT A SIMPLE MATTER Proposition 36, passed by the voters a little more than a year ago, changed the focus of anti-drug efforts in the state. A change that major often comes with teething troubles, which illustrate the dangers of legislating by ballot measure and the need for San Bernardino County to do a better job of putting it into practice. The idea behind the measure - instead of repeatedly jailing drug users, treat them and thus eliminate the problem - makes good sense as social policy. Throwing addicts into jail only takes them off the streets, it doesn't change the basic behavior of addiction. It's an inefficient way to fight a war on drugs. Giving drug users treatment and rehabilitation can return them to society as useful citizens and cut down the demand for illegal drugs. Mandating the procedure by initiative, however, creates problems. First, if the law isn't working properly, it can't be tweaked by the Legislature. Changes have to go before the state's voters, which makes what should be easy adjustments painfully slow. Funding also causes trouble for local governments. The initiative specified an eventual $120 million a year in funding, but parceled out to counties, that amount comes to far less than needed to run such programs successfully. And the mandated spending expires in 2005-2006; after that it's up to the Legislature to keep the program funded. Nor, strangely enough, did the initiative contain any money for drug testing - a vital component of any drug treatment program. Until it finally received money from the state for the purpose, San Bernardino County couldn't even test everyone in the judicial system under Proposition 36. But how can anyone be sure drug users are clean if they aren't tested regularly? Not doing so makes a mockery of the whole process. The county also needs to tighten up its procedures. In the West Valley Superior Court - the county's second-largest - there's a time lag between when defendants decide to plead guilty and accept treatment and the time they first deal with probation officers. Thus they can be out on the streets using drugs again before their program even begins. That's ridiculous. The county needs to make sure that drug users go directly from court into treatment programs, without giving them time to backslide. And such people need to be held strictly accountable for following the law's mandates. Periodic reports won't do the trick; something stronger is necessary. The county actually has a good model to follow with its drug courts, which have tallied up a fine record of success in the roughly seven years they've been operating. They rely on strict accountability and close monitoring by a whole team, including the judge. Such courts don't just deal with legal problems but attempt to change lifestyles and habits as well in a comprehensive approach to the problem. The county didn't use that approach, arguing it didn't have the money to do so - the funding problem, again. But without the kind of close supervision drug courts use, it's unlikely that Proposition 36 will ever work as intended. The law has problems, certainly, but that's no excuse for not trying to make its goals work in practice. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake