Pubdate: Tue, 05 Feb 2002 Source: Palm Beach Post (FL) Copyright: 2002 The Palm Beach Post Contact: http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333 Referenced: Florida Drug Treatment Initiative http://www.drugreform.org/florida/ Florida Office of Drug Control http://www.myflorida.com/myflorida/government/governorinitiatives/drugcontrol/ Alert: Governor Jeb Bush And Tough Drug Law Policies http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0230.html Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) http://www.mapinc.org/people/Jeb+Bush http://www.mapinc.org/people/Noelle+Bush http://www.mapinc.org/people/James+McDonough DRUG-TREATMENT CUTS LEAVE STATE VULNERABLE Noelle Bush's problems with drug abuse and the law may focus attention on Florida's failure to provide adequate drug treatment for families who don't have the Bushes' resources. Late last month, the Florida Department of Corrections approved a $13 million cut that will eliminate many drug-treatment programs for inmates and for people getting treatment in community programs. The cuts are severe. The Comprehensive Alcoholism Rehabilitation Program has operated 45 inpatient treatment beds for the state in Palm Beach County and 45 in Martin County. Executive Director Robert Bozzone said the cuts closed 14 beds in each county, effective last Friday. The Drug Abuse Foundation is losing 10 of its 30 beds in Palm Beach County, Executive Director Alton Taylor said. "Without treatment," Mr. Bozzone says, offenders "are going to go back to jail. They're going to commit crimes." Nearly one-third of all crimes in Florida are drug-related. The DOC reports that more than 70 percent of offenders who complete drug programs stay out of prison. Statewide, residential treatment centers are cutting more than 30 percent of inpatient beds. In addition, the state no longer will subsidize outpatient treatment for tens of thousands of patients statewide. While the per-person charge can be as little as $15 or $20 a week, many drug abusers can't afford that much and could lose their only alternative to incarceration. Cuts also affect many drug courts across the state. The innovative courts offer treatment instead of jail to first-time offenders motivated to change their lives. Palm Beach County's new drug court benefits from a federal start-up grant and from a fund that State Attorney Barry Krischer created, says Diana Cunningham, executive director of the Criminal Justice Commission. The loss of state money, however, is ominous. "We feel sort of safe today," Ms. Cunningham said, "but that's not a long-term thing." In addition to cutting the corrections department, the Legislature, trying to close a $1 billion budget gap, cut drug-treatment money in the social-services budget. James McDonough, director of the Florida Office of Drug Control, had told Palm Beach County officials he was optimistic that trust fund money could be shifted to cover the expected $6 million reduction. But last week he said, "My optimism didn't pan out." The legislative panel in charge of the trusts refused to shift the money, resulting in a 15 percent drop in drug-treatment money -- a cut that feels like 30 percent, Col. McDonough says, because the full burden falls on half the fiscal year, which ends June 30. Col. McDonough says that since taking office in 1999, Gov. Bush has increased drug-treatment money and that his budget for next year would restore all treatment money lost from the social-services budget. Still, the governor signed off on the budget cuts without looking for other options. Nor does Gov. Bush favor all treatment measures. He opposes a ballot initiative that would require treatment instead of prison for most nonviolent offenders. "To suggest there should be no penalties for continued drug use," Gov. Bush said in August, "is to stick our heads in the sand." Col. McDonough wants the Legislature to quickly pass a bill that, with some creative bureaucratic shuffling, could plug this year's gap. Lawmakers should pause in their busy redistricting schedule to help Col. McDonough. While Gov. Bush has agreed to seek reinstatement of $5 million lost from the prisons budget, according to a DOC spokesman, most of the money for treating inmates would not be restored. That shortsighted approach in the long run will hurt offenders as well as their future victims and taxpayers who build and staff prisons. As Gov. Bush pointed out, many families cope with drug abuse. In Florida, however, budget cuts are making it hard for families to cope, and the governor is part of that problem. Because of who she is, Ms. Bush will get the treatment she needs. Gov. Bush should support policies that give all Floridians the same advantages. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake