Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 2002 Source: Recorder, The (NY) Copyright: 2002 The Recorder Contact: http://www.recordernews.com/coverpage/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2116 Author: Elaine Grant Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) ONE STEP AT A TIME Participants In Montgomery County's Drug Court Learn To Walk Before They Can Run FONDA - A stocky young man named Raphael hobbled down the aisle in the Montgomery County courtroom with the aid of crutches. His arms were tattooed with an assortment of blue designs. Judge Felix Catena greeted him with a smile. "How are you?" the judge asked. When Raphael answered that he was doing well, Catena gestured toward the crutches. "You've got a new problem now," he observed. Raphael admitted he had injured his knee playing handball in jail. The exchange was different from what usually takes place in the courtroom. Thursday was drug court, the purpose of which is to assist offenders in changing their lives around and beating the addictions that led them into trouble in the first time. In drug court, the whole person is considered by an entire treatment team. Everything about their lives is important because those things could determine whether they succeed or fail. A simple thing like a knee injury could make a big difference. Raphael has been sober for more than a year but he admitted he's cut back on the number of Alcoholics Anonymous meetings he has been attending. He said he has no transportation and he has to walk to his meetings. It's difficult to do with his knee the way it is. His girlfriend can't drive him because by the time the meetings are over, her kids are tucked in for the night. Claudia McDuffie, program supervisor of the alcohol clinic at St. Mary's Hospital who functions as part of the drug court team, called his bluff. She asked if he has made any friends at AA since he has been attending regularly. When he said he had, she advised him to hitch a ride with one of them to get to the meetings. As Raphael returned to his seat, a young woman named Mary was called forward. She hadn't been doing too well. She had been unsuccessfully discharged from a rehab program at St. Mary's Hospital because she had reportedly been using Tylenol P.M., an over-the-counter drug not approved in her program. Catena announced that the drug court team had met and decided to impose a sanction - she was going to jail. "We feel you're not being totally honest with the team and you're using your daughter to get certain advantages," he told her. He added that the team was in the process of making arrangements for her to go to a rehabilitation program but he was concerned that her attitude was too negative to make it in the program. "I really think it's the medications I was taking for anxiety," Mary said. "They made me just not care about anything." She assured him she had discontinued the medications and she still wanted to stay in the program. After she was escorted from the room by a sheriff's deputy, her father asked to speak on her behalf. He said he didn't think a halfway house is what she needs. "What she needs is to be productive, to go to a job," he said. Catena explained that he was going with what the professionals on the team were recommending. "This is not forever," he assured the man. "We have to put one foot in front of the other." A tall thin man named Dan was having trouble trying to control his fidgeting as he stood before the bench. He explained that he was under a lot of stress at work. Catena told him the team had decided to increase the number of AA meetings they wanted him to attend and put him on a more intensive outpatient treatment schedule. "I'll do what you say," Dan said. "It's for the best. That's the way I see it." When he was asked what his biggest challenge was in getting sober, he said, "My pride has been the biggest thing - admitting I've got a problem that brought me to this." A man named Norman, who sported a long pony tail down the back of his neck, told the judge he was doing well but he was frustrated by his inability to get a job. "I ain't getting no calls or nothing," he said "One of the guys I got laid off with - he got a job last week." McDuffie offered to make an appointment for him with a vocational counselor. "I'd appreciate it. I'm not used to not working," he said. Drug courts like the one in Montgomery County are sweeping the nation with the aid of federal training grants. The courts take a lot longer than traditional courts. Offenders have to appear several times a month and answer for what they have done since the last time they were in. The point behind the program is to provide intense supervision and support to help the offender beat the addiction that led them there in the first place. Catena explained that in the traditional system, offenders go to jail and are released to start their problem all over again. In the drug court program, they are subjected to regular testing. They go through counseling and they are given the tools they need to clean up and stay clean. They must have a job and a place to live before they can graduate. The program is in its second year so it is too soon to tell how long the effect will be on the participants. There are presently 13 or 14 people in the program. Two others have graduated. Only one has failed. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel