Pubdate: Sat,  1 Jun 2002
Source: Greenville Advocate, The (AL)
Copyright: 2002 None found
Contact:  http://www.greenvilleadvocate.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1869
Author: STACEY KILLINGSWORTH
Note: This is the fifth in a 13 weeks series on drug addiction in South 
Central Alabama
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n925/a01.html (Part 1)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n945/a03.html (Part 2)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n985/a03.html (Part 4)

DRUG POLICY SINCE 1970

In April 1972, Special Assistant Attorney General of the United States 
Myles J. Ambrose told U.S. News and World Report, "As of 1960, the Bureau 
of Narcotics estimated that we had somewhere in the neighborhood of 55,000 
addicts.

They estimate now the figure is 560,000." Although it is possible that the 
number of addicts increased during those years, it also is possible that 
the government became more enlightened on the use and abuse of 
non-medicinal drugs.

 From the early 1970s, the U.S. government began instituting several 
agencies and programs to help get a better estimate of drug use in the U.S. 
In 1971, President Nixon declared that "America's Public Enemy No. 1 is 
drug abuse," and then called for the creation of a Special Action Office of 
Drug Abuse Prevention, according to Time. As a result, the Drug Abuse 
Warning Network (DAWN) and the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse 
(NHSDA) were both initiated. The NHSDA, now a project of the Substance 
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), surveys 
approximately 70,000 persons per year in an effort to receive information 
on the prevalence and incidence of illicit drug, alcohol and tobacco use in 
the population aged 12 years and older.

The survey has been in effect since 1972, and in 2000, reported that 
nationwide, an estimated 14.0 million Americans were current illicit drug 
users, meaning they had used an illicit drug during the month prior to 
interview. The Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) is an ongoing drug abuse 
data collection system sponsored by SAMHSA's Office of Applied Studies 
(OAS).  DAWN collects data from hospital emergency departments and medical 
examiners, and has been doing so since 1992. DAWN also collects information 
on drug-related deaths from a sample of death investigation jurisdictions, 
which is published annually in the "Mortality Data from the Drug Abuse 
Warning Network." The legal foundation of the government's fight against 
the abuse of drugs and other substances is through the Controlled 
Substances Act (CSA). The act was established by Title II of the 
Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970, which 
regulates the manufacture and distribution of narcotics, according to the 
United States Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). "The CSA places all substances 
that are regulated under existing federal law into one of five schedules.

This placement is based on the substance's medicinal value, harmfulness and 
potential for abuse or addiction.

Schedule I is reserved for the most dangerous drugs that have no recognized 
medical use, while Schedule V is the classification used for the least 
dangerous drugs," according to the DEA," according to the administration. 
In 1985, the Pentagon spent approximately $40 million on interdiction, and 
by 1990, the General Accounting Office reported that the military's efforts 
have had no discernible impact on the flow of drugs, as reported by the 
Schaffer Library. The Office of National Drug Control predicts that 
although the Pentagon's efforts some 17 years ago showed no impact on the 
flow of drugs, the federal government will spend approximately $19.2 
billion at a rate of about $609 per second on the war on drugs, with state 
and local governments spending at least another $20 billion.

Arrests for drug law violations in 2002 are expected to exceed the 
1,579,566 arrests of 2000, according to the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation's Uniform Crime Reports. In addition, the FBI reports that 
someone is arrested every 20 seconds.

On Friday, the United States Department of Justice reported that 99,000 
people had already been incarcerated this year for drug law offenses, and 
that the total predicted number of arrests for 2002 will exceed 235,000. 
The authors of The Effective National Drug Control Strategy 1999, which 
includes such reforms networks as the Council on Illicit Drugs and the Drug 
Reform Coordination Network, "the current model of drug control relies 
primarily on law enforcement to seize drugs and imprison drug offenders.

While these efforts have produced large numbers of arrests, incarcerations 
and seizures, drug overdose deaths have increased 540 percent since 1980 
and drug-related problems have worsened. "The drug war has succeeded in 
arresting and incarcerating large numbers of people; in fact, there are 
over 1.7 million Americans behind bars. As of June 1996, 5.5 million 
Americans were under some form of control by the justice system.

Which translates into one out of every 35 adults in the nation." The group 
added that the Department of Justice has reported 85 percent of the 
increase in the federal prison population from 1985 to 1995 was due to drug 
convictions. The drug war is continuing, and many policies and reform 
groups have worked to combat drugs and their users throughout the U.S. 
Although millions of dollars may be spent each year on drug offenders and 
users, it is the best way money can be spent to keep children and adults of 
the U.S. safe in their communities. 
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart