Pubdate: Tue, 31 Dec 2002 Source: Gleaner, The (Henderson, KY) Copyright: 2002 The E.W. Scripps Co Contact: http://www.thegleaner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1634 Author: Roy N. Pullam DRUG ABUSE MORE PRISONS POOR ANSWER TO PROBLEM As an instructor in the public schools, I have seen extremely talented students come to a stop then completely turn the lights off on their futures. The source of their apathy is the use of "recreational drugs" that led to a serious habit. I have seen parents floundering for want of a solution to the vexing problems of drug abuse. I have seen these young people go from court to court, crime to crime and institution to institution. Their parents are law-abiding taxpayers who are broken by the sorry condition of their offspring, riddled by self-doubt and doomed often to raise their grandchildren in their "golden age." It is difficult for this society to get a grip on the problem; our prisons reel from the numbers of offenders behind bars. Our answer to the problem is to build more prisons, incur massive deficits and to write off these young people. It should be an embarrassment to us all that we now rank close behind the Chinese for the number of individuals detained. Considering the fact they have four times our population and that many of their prisoners are there for opposition to the Communist iron fist creates a conclusion that should make us all hang our heads. We badly need a drug court in this country. First of all, it would give the abuser the choice of prison or treatment. This would reduce the problem of overcrowding in our jails, and it would require the offender to appear for random drug tests. They would not have an additional strike against their record, and they could pay for their treatment through additional public service or gainful employment. Treatment would reduce the number of crimes committed to feed the increasing drug habit. In addition, it would arrest the swinging door and the finishing school for crime. I noticed the zeal the southern Illinois community had to get a prison. They even recorded a rap video to induce the politicians to locate a prison in their community. I feel with all my heart that America must be shamed when the major growth industry is a prison and the people cannot see that they are throwing away our youth in the process. As foul as some consider the "birds" downtown, I would rather they be our monuments than a shiny, new prison. If we want to rebuild our community life, we need to throw away the thumb-screws and start treating children whose only crime is use of a controlled substance. Once we arrive at that conclusion, there will be enough room in existing prisons for good, long sentences. EDITOR'S NOTE: The writer is a local educator and a frequent contributor to The Gleaner's Opinion Page. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek