Pubdate: Sat, 30 Mar 2002 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2002 ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 Website: http://www.oaklandtribune.com/ DISCRETION NEEDED ON STRICT HIGH COURT RULING ILLEGAL drugs breed crime, tarnish neighborhoods and put innocent people in danger every day. HUD officials need strong laws to help clean up the drug problem at public housing complexes, and in its Tuesday ruling the U.S. Supreme Court concluded that one such law allows the agency to evict public housing tenants for their relatives' or houseguests' drug use, regardless of how much they knew what was going on. We support that conclusion, but also believe housing authorities and other agencies that run subsidized housing programs need to be judicious in the issuance of evictions in such situations, reviewing each incident with compassion and on a case-by-case basis. The historic Oakland case involves four tenants who are 66 and older, including one who is disabled. In three of the cases, a relative used drugs nearby. In the fourth case, a home health care worker was caught using crack cocaine in the tenant's apartment. All the tenants signed leases that mentioned the federal zero-tolerance policy created by Congress. Maybe holding HUD residents accountable for the drug sins of relatives and visitors will inspire more tenants to make sure they don't look the other way. Ignoring drug use in a community only perpetuates the problem. And if tenants, once they are warned, realize they'll be kicked out for the drug use of visitors and relatives, they'll tell those folks they aren't welcome there. The dangers of drug use to the wider neighborhood can't be underestimated. You've heard the stories a million times. Someone making methamphetamine spills a caustic chemical. Cops chasing an addict who robbed a liquor store cause a fatal car wreck. A dope deal turns violent and a kid standing nearby ends up shot. The housing authority has long pushed for compliance. This law is nothing new. In the private sector, anyone who signs a housing lease knows he or she is agreeing to obey a set of specific conditions and risks eviction if those conditions are violated. Of course, as the Supreme Court pointed out in its ruling, local housing authorities don't have to evict. They have the latitude to weigh the severity of individual cases and decide whether the tenant took reasonable steps to prevent it. We urge local housing authority officials to apply the law humanely, and it appears they are. According to an ANG Newspapers report Thursday, the Oakland Housing Authority says it won't evict the elderly tenants as long as the people involved with drugs have left. Perhaps the publicity over the case influenced the authority's decision, but we hope this shows the law can be reasonably applied and won't result in residents being kicked out cavalierly, as has been feared by opponents of the one-strike policy. In Thursday's New York Times, Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, issued a statement expressing concern about the law's broad reach and said it is especially troubling given President George W. Bush's elimination of a policing program for public housing that provided programs for substance abusers. Lee brings up an important point: It's one thing to kick people out of federally subsidized housing for breaking the rules, but kicking them out doesn't solve the greater problem of drug addiction. The government needs to provide programs to help abusers. However, it's important to note that Lee stopped short of proposing to change the law. Sometimes we have to support tough laws to solve tough problems. We need to make sure federally subsidized housing complexes are clean, safe places to live, but also places where those who abide by the law can continue to live. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk