Pubdate: Fri, 26 Sep 2003 Source: Oshkosh Northwestern (WI) Copyright: 2003 Gannett Co., Inc. Contact: 224 State Street Oshkosh, WI 54901 Website: http://www.wisinfo.com/northwestern/index.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2640 Author: Carol Roessler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Note: The author is Sen. Carol A. Roessler, 18th Senate District (888) 736-8720 (Madison), (920) 233-6889 (District) COMMENTARY: STATE MUST COME TO GRIPS WITH PRISON PROBLEM The State of Wisconsin is facing a crisis: a prison-and-jail-overcrowding, taxpayers-spending-too-much-on-corrections, too-many-offenders-recommitting-crimes-after-release type of crisis. This crisis is the result of an unsatisfactory correctional system -a system that is not addressing and treating the core problem that drives many offenders into prison. Drug and alcohol addicted offenders are entering and re-entering prisons and jails, and will continue to do so until we stop this cycle. Currently, two-thirds of the 23,000 people in Wisconsin's prisons are made up of inmates who have drug or alcohol abuse problems. Wisconsin needs to provide "corrective" treatment while holding criminals accountable for their actions. Science-based research shows that treatment is cheaper and more effective than incarceration in dealing with alcohol and drug dependent offenders. In an effort to save the state and its counties millions of dollars while providing treatment to those who desperately need it, I am proposing the Addicted Offenders Accountability and Public Safety Act. My proposal aims to lower inmate populations, reduce recidivism, lower the number of victims of crime and increase public safety. This legislation creates a voluntary grant program for pilot counties to establish or expand programs offering drug and alcohol treatment options for non-violent offenders with immediate accountability sanctions and treatment for the whole person. For nearly two years, I have consulted with various statewide groups, judges, district attorneys, public defenders, law enforcement agents, and drug and alcohol treatment providers to capture the essential general criteria for effective treatment alternatives that work and help keep communities safe. Throughout my contacts, it has become clear that counties are eager to develop creative, effective and accountable local programs which lead to former offenders becoming taxpaying, productive community members. Last week I convened a meeting with the Secretary of Corrections Matthew Frank, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Family Services Helene Nelson, the Office of Justice Assistance staff, Governor Jim Doyle's policy staff, and a staff member from the office of state Sen. Gwen Moore, D-Milwaukee, to focus on fine-tuning this proposal. Our next step is to identify treatment alternative funding within existing state and federal resources for the start-up cost of this program. Future costs are expected to be offset by reductions in correctional costs. Let me be clear: We must not and will not allow our state to divert dangerous individuals. The time is now for the Addicted Offenders Accountability and Public Safety Act to be passed and implemented in Wisconsin. This bill is a partial solution to our burgeoning inmate population and may be an answer to reducing the number of drug and alcohol-related offenses in the state. We must move forward to address and treat the real problems in the correctional system. I am hopeful that the Addicted Offenders Accountability and Public Safety Act will accomplish this smart and safe solution. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk