Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jul 2002 Source: Courier, The (OH) Copyright: 2002 The Findlay Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.thecourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2293 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/props.htm (Ballot Initiatives) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Cited: http://www.ohiodrugreform.org/ (Ohio Campaign for New Drug Policies) IT AIN'T BROKE OHIO ALREADY HAS DRUG COURTS OPTION Gov. Bob Taft is on a crusade against a ballot initiative that would make sweeping changes in the way drug offenses are handled in Ohio. The governor is joined in his efforts by numerous law enforcement groups, medical and hospital officials, judges and attorneys, crime victim groups, and drug treatment professionals. The initiative -- the Ohio Campaign for New Drug Policies -- would require judges to sentence nonviolent first- and second-time drug offenders to treatment programs instead of prison. So what's so terrible about that? Few would argue that if a person has a chemical dependency that causes him to break the law, he needs treatment. First, the initiative is not needed. Ohio's drug laws already allow intervention instead of prison for low-level drug offenses. Rather than being required to order treatment programs, judges should be able to continue to decide each case on its own merits. Sometimes treatment is what's needed; sometimes prison is the best way to get a young offender's attention. Second, it's the money. The initiative would require Ohio to increase drug-treatment spending by $19 million initially, then $38 million a year for six years -- and it mandates how that money would be spent: on plans to treat "the whole person," including literacy training, vocational training and family counseling as well as drug counseling and treatment. Ohio's current drug court program already offers similar treatment -- but like most state programs, it's been hit by budget cuts. Apparently initiative backers John Sperling, George Soros and Peter Lewis, all three billionaires, think they know more than the Ohio Legislature about what can and should be spent to operate an anti-drug program in Ohio. They want to set in stone a fixed amount of funding for this program, which they claim would ultimately save money for the state. Never mind that the state is coming off a recession that severely dented its revenues, and that the state constitution requires a balanced budget now. Which brings us to our third objection: the method. A constitutional amendment is an overly drastic step for a change in policy, and sound- byte campaigning is not an effective way to educate the public. Proponents of drug law change would do better to work through the Legislature, where the proposal can be vetted by our elected representatives and made to fit the budget. If this is an idea that's worth a try, let's give it just that -- a try, and not throw away the key after we unlock the door. Ultimately, people are best encouraged to follow the law if the law is both compassionate and firm. Treatment is needed in some cases, and should continue to be an option. But if treatment is the required sentence, it removes an important incentive for staying away from drugs in the first place. Ohio's drug courts, while suffering from budget woes, already offer what the Ohio Campaign for New Drug Policies would offer -- only they work within the limitations of the system. Let's keep it that way. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel