Pubdate: Fri, 01 Mar 2002 Source: Durango Herald, The (US CO) Copyright: 2002 The Durango Herald Contact: http://durangoherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/866 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG COURT Legal Experiment Becoming A Successful Program Drug addiction is a personal problem with public repercussions. Dealing with it as a crime, however, has proven to be expensive, painful and too often futile. Drug courts are an attempt to provide an alternative that benefits both society and the individual. The experiment seems to be working. At a Wednesday meeting to review the first year of the 6th Judicial District's drug court, representatives of the legal system and law enforcement agreed that the program is a humane and cost-effective method for handling and helping drug offenders. That is not to say drug court is a warm and fuzzy affair; far from it. Twenty-two people are in the program, and each case is reviewed by the District Attorney's Office. Individuals must be nonviolent and their problems must be drug-related, not just criminal. Then they are subject to random drug tests, probation and drug- addiction treatment. They perform community service and must report to the court regularly. Drug court offers offenders both carrots and a stick. Failing a drug test can land them in jail. Good work can lead to the forgiveness of certain fees and other rewards. The successful completion of the program means the offender's record will not show a felony conviction. The taxpayers win, too. The drug court program is cheaper than jail, results in less time spent in jail and reduces the load on our overburdened judicial system. Any improvement in helping addicts recover also has a real value to the community. Jails are notoriously costly and not particularly effective as teaching tools. That is especially true in dealing with people in the throes of addictions. Treatment and the kind of structured program administered as part of the drug-court program offer a cheaper, and possibly more effective, alternative. The 6th Judicial District's drug court owes its existence in part to Jim Dyer, who represented Southwest Colorado in both the state House of Representatives and the state Senate. He sponsored a bill that provided the court's first funding - $38,000 to operate from January through July 2001, and another $70,000 to continue until July of this year. It is one of four pilot programs operating in Colorado. There are no magic wands for dealing with illegal behavior, no perfect formulas for treating addictions. But there are methods proven not to work and alternatives worth trying. Drug court's first year strongly suggests it is a path worth pursuing. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth