Pubdate: Fri, 12 Sep 2003 Source: Olympian, The (WA) Copyright: 2003, The Olympian Contact: http://www.theolympian.com/forms/lettrfrm.shtml Website: http://www.theolympian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/319 Author: Elizabeth M. Gillespie, The Associated Press DRUG CZAR FAULTS CANADA'S POLICIES Official Visits Seattle on National Tour to Tout Anti-Drug Effort SEATTLE -- Winning the war on drugs will require better coordination of prevention, law enforcement, treatment and other services for addicts, the White House's drug czar said Thursday. "There are people working every day to save lives in prevention, treatment and public safety. ... They feel that their work is not as effective as it would be because it's not linked to the other parts of the community that have a contribution to make," John Walters, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy said. "They're treating people, they're trying to get people into recovery, but they're not as tied to people that are going to help provide housing and jobs and education to make sure the recovery has the best prospect of succeeding," Walters said. "What we're trying to do is not just run good individual programs at the federal level. We're trying to make sure those programs are making a difference." Walters said the Canadian government needs to crack down harder on prosecuting drug crimes. "Political leadership in Canada has failed to take steps to significantly reduce the threat, particularly from high-potency marijuana," Walters said. "What they do with their domestic policy is obviously their business," he went on to say. "We respect their sovereignty. ... But when that business harms Americans, that's our job, to protect Americans." Seattle was Walters' sixth stop in a 25-city national tour promoting the government's anti-drug campaign. Much of the nation's $11.5 billion drug control budget is doled out to cities and states for programs ranging from education to enforcement. Walters said he knows what needs to be done to curb drug use and he says he's going to make it happen. "We're not going to say that we've tried to just give money and good speeches about this," he said. "We know how to prevent drug use. We know the importance of preventing drug use. We know that if you do not begin using illegal drugs, alcohol and cigarettes when you're a teenager, the number who go on to use is extremely small, and the number of those that go on to use and have a problem is even smaller." Walters criticized Initiative 75, a measure Tuesday's ballot in Seattle, that would make marijuana possession the lowest law-enforcement priority in the city. He dismissed the notion that marijuana creates less serious problems than cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine. "What people do not understand today is that of the roughly 7 million people age 12 and above who need treatment in this country because of their dependence or abuse of illegal drugs, 60 percent are dependent on marijuana," Walters said. "It is more a factor in producing treatment need than any other illegal drug." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake