Pubdate: Tue, 22 Jan 2002 Source: Beacon Journal, The (OH) Copyright: 2002 The Beacon Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.ohio.com/bj/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/6 THE TREATMENT DIFFERENCE Summit County Gets Smart. It Opts For A Drug Court Judge Mary Spicer of the Summit County Common Pleas Court noted what many of her colleagues, here and elsewhere, have: Illegal drugs and drug addiction play overwhelming roles in the system of criminal justice. Spicer knows the frustration of defendants caught in a revolving door, traveling from the streets to jail and back. The challenge becomes how to break the destructive cycle. Summit County judges have rightly opted for one promising tool, a treatment- based drug court. The court is expected to open in the spring. Judge Spicer will preside. The purpose is to provide nonviolent felony offenders with an avenue to break their drug addiction and abandon lives of crime. Stark County has a drug court. Judge Elinore Stormer of the Akron Municipal Court launched a drug court for misdemeanants. Both have proved beneficial, following the trend reported in national studies of reduced crime and costs. Statistics show offenders are less likely to be rearrested once they've participated. Police officers have applauded the program. Provide incentives to break a drug habit (in the end, erasing a conviction), and the community positions itself to win twice: A citizen becomes productive, and taxpayers save money. A drug court also suggests the larger challenge of dealing with the wide range of issues involving mental health and addiction. Treatment works, as long as it is adequate and consistent. So would parity in insurance coverage for mental-health care, a question now before the legislature. In most instances, mental illness can be treated like a physical ailment. The Golden Globes honored A Beautiful Mind, the movie of version of the life of John Nash, the brilliant mathematician afflicted with schizophrenia. Others have saluted the show, usually with the hope that greater understanding of mental illness will follow. The Summit County Common Pleas Court has taken its own enlightened approach. Often mental illness and drug addiction go together. So do treatment and productive lives. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth