Pubdate: Wed, 15 Oct 2003 Source: Sherwood Park News (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 Sherwood Park News Contact: http://www.sherwoodparknews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1730 Author: John Wittan SENATE REPORT KNOCKED DARE Re: Sgt. Kevin Graham (retired) received Governor General award for introducing school drug awareness program in Canada Kudos for you Mr. Graham and DARE! However, according to the Senate Committee on Drug Reform (at www.parl.gc.ca/37/1/parlbus/commbus/senate/com-e/ille-e/rep-e/summary-e.htm): Prevention strategies in schools should not be led by police services or delivered by police officers; The RCMP should reconsider its choice of the DARE program that many evaluation studies have shown to be ineffective; The resources and powers of enforcement are greatly out of balance compared with those of the health and education fields and the civil society; The costs of all illegal drugs had risen to close to $1.4 billion in 1992; Of the total costs of illegal drugs in 1992, externalities (social costs) represented 67 per cent and public policy costs 33 per cent; The social costs of illegal drugs and the public policy costs are underestimated ; The cost of enforcing the drug laws is more likely to be closer to $1 billion to $1.5 billion per annum; The principal public policy cost relative to cannabis is that of law enforcement and the justice system; which may be estimated to represent a total of $300 to $500 million per annum; The costs of externalities attributable to cannabis are probably minimal -- no deaths, few hospitalizations, and little loss of productivity; The costs of public policy on cannabis are disproportionately high given the drug's social and health consequences; and The Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse is seriously underfunded; its annual budget amounts to barely 0.1 per cent of the social costs of illegal drugs alone (alcohol not included). Its budget should be increased to at least 1 per cent; that is, approximately $15 million per annum. Explain that Mr. Graham. If only we could get politicians and police to end the "war on drugs," legalize everything for adults only, regulate it, tax it, and leave it for the free market instead of neo-Al Capones we would save billions of dollars. Let's end prohibition at least for our children's sake, so to eliminate violent drug dealers getting our children to DARE sooner or later to try drugs. Under prohibition, drug dealers don't have to ask anyone for ID (that you are legal age) to buy drugs. Why do those in power refuse to admit the emperor has no clothes? John Wittan Edmonton - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman