Pubdate: Sat, 02 Aug 2003 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2003 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Benita Y. Williams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) JACKSON COUNTY'S ANTI-DRUG TAX DEBATED Supporters and opponents of Jackson County's anti-drug tax on Friday debated whether too much tax revenue goes to law enforcement rather than to treatment. On Tuesday, voters will decide whether to renew the Community-Backed Anti-Drug Tax, called COMBAT. The quarter-cent sales tax, set to expire in March 2004, will generate about $19.8 million this year for law enforcement, drug treatment and prevention. Friday's debate took place during the taping of KCPT-TV's Week In Review. The discussion aired Friday evening and will be rebroadcast at 11 a.m. Sunday. Representing the tax supporters were Jackson County Prosecutor Michael Sanders and COMBAT Program Director Jim Nunnelly. Speaking against the measure were Richard Tolbert of the Organized Opposition to the Jackson County Anti-Drug Tax, and Patrick Sumner, a columnist for a community newsletter opposed to COMBAT. Sanders said about 71 percent of COMBAT's revenue goes to drug treatment and prevention and 28.5 percent goes to law enforcement including the prosecutor's office. Tolbert disagreed. "That's simply not true," said Tolbert, who said the amount going to treatment and prevention was closer to 28.5 percent. "Mike has his numbers backward." At issue was whether COMBAT-funded court and jail programs should be categorized as treatment or law enforcement. One of those court programs, drug court, allows nonviolent, drug-addicted offenders to avoid jail by receiving treatment. Nunnelly said it was a treatment program, but Tolbert said drug court was law enforcement. "I think it's very misleading that you (Tolbert) would take deferred prosecution (drug court) and call it law enforcement," Nunnelly said. Tolbert replied, "I don't want to quibble about programs. If these programs are so worthwhile, let them take a higher priority at the county's annual budgeting process." Tolbert also said COMBAT was ineffective because drugs were as or more plentiful now than before the tax's approval. Sanders disagreed. "Mr. Tolbert has no data to back that up," Sanders said. "If you look at the hard data that law enforcement has, $300 million in narcotics have been removed from the streets." Sanders credited COMBAT with closing 7,200 drug houses, providing 4,300 treatment slots annually and reducing drug use among area teens. Sumner criticized COMBAT's funding of Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or DARE. The program uses police officers to teach schoolchildren about the dangers of drugs. Sumner cited national studies that said the program was ineffective at preventing drug use. "I don't believe we should have police officers training children about these things," Sumner said. "We should have somebody with a social welfare degree or maybe a reformed drug addict would be more effective." Sanders said COMBAT allows officials to expand local DARE programs to make them more effective. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk