Pubdate: Sat, 11 Oct 2003 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Paula Simons SORRY, MAYOR BILL. WE CAN'T WISH AWAY DRUG USE Tougher laws and longer jail terms can't cure social ills, or stop the killings So Sheriff Billy wants the bad guys out of Dodge. "Get out of Edmonton. Get out of Alberta," Mayor Smith told the city's drug merchants and drug users yesterday. I understand his frustration. The recent rash of drug-related gang violence in this city is frightening. So too is the apparent inability of the police and the courts to stop the killings. But you can't wish the problem away. Nor can you eliminate the drug trade, and the crime that goes with it, with police helicopters, zero-tolerance policies and massive gang trials. It's no surprise Smith feels the need to make a strong law-and-order statement now. The groundswell of support for police Chief Bob Wasylyshen's hypothetical mayoral campaign clearly touched a nerve. And the mayor has a point. "Ordinary" Edmontonians who dabble in hard drugs and then complain about gang violence are hypocrites. But borrowing the overripe rhetoric of the failed American war on drugs won't make Edmonton's streets safer. I share the mayor's distaste for drug use. A community where too many people escape their problems, shirk their responsibilities, impair their judgment and numb their emotions by abusing consciousness-altering drugs -- including alcohol -- is a sick community. High school students shouldn't be high on pot or crystal meth or beer, whether they're studying or simply engaging with life. Parents ought not to neglect their kids while they're out looking for their next score or knocking back their next highball. Messing with your brain chemistry, even "recreationally," is a risky game -- and a pretty pathetic way to have "fun." But just as (U.S.) Prohibition didn't stop people from drinking, drug prohibition has demonstrated a lousy track record in stopping people from using drugs. As long as there is a market for illegal drugs, entrepreneurs will step up to meet that demand. Put one drug gang in jail, and a new one will take its place. Stop cocaine at the border, and you create a market for a home-grown alternative: crystal methamphetamine. And with the illegal drug trade, comes violence. Richard Stevenson, professor of health economics at Liverpool University, put the problem well in a paper for the Fraser Institute. "One would not wish to express strong sympathy for drug dealers," said Stevenson. "But consider the situation from their point of view. "In illegal trades, contracts do not have the backing of the law. Disputes cannot be settled or debts recovered by appeal to the courts. Firms cannot compete by normal means. In the absence of normal competitive processes, firms protect and expand their markets by the use of violence, or the threat of violence." And that's what we see playing out on Edmonton's streets. There is a policy alternative. But it's a daring one. We could decriminalize "hard" drugs. We could strictly regulate their sale, carefully monitor their purity, then tax the proceeds. We could put the drug gangs out of business. And we could reduce the health problems associated with the underground drug trade, like HIV and hepatitis. It's an argument gaining surprising strength on both the left and the right, in the face of the war-on-drugs policy failure. I'm still wrestling with it. I fret over the medical, social, ethical and, dare I say, spiritual consequences of normalizing drug use. But maybe it's time to divert some of the resources we put into fighting crime into fighting addiction, to frame this as a public health challenge. That means more money for drug treatment and counselling. More money for mental health care. More money for everything from primary education to affordable housing to job retraining to programs that keep kids off drugs and out of gang culture. Drug use, though, transcends class lines. It's part of the lifestyle of the rich and famous, the ordinary and middle-class. It's cool. It's glamorous. And that's in no small part because it's illicit. Tougher laws and longer jail terms can't cure our social ills, or stop the killings. Our old "solutions" aren't working. It's time to start trying some new ones. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh