Pubdate: Tue, 28 Oct 2003 Source: Beaufort Gazette, The (SC) Copyright: 2003 The Beaufort Gazette Contact: http://www.beaufortgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1806 Author: Kelly Morgan, Gazette staff writer Cited: National Association for Drug Court Professionals http://www.nadcp.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG COURT CONTROVERSY Reno Trip Stirs Budget Opposition Morgan Some City Council members are balking at a plan to give the Beaufort County Drug Court $30,000 this year until Judge Manning Smith justifies having spent more than $6,000 on a conference in Reno, Nev., last May. After the council on Sept. 23 passed first reading of a budget amendment to support the court, Mayor Bill Rauch faxed Smith a letter asking for more information about the national drug court conference. Rauch said he wanted "to make sure the money's being spent in a way that's consistent with the city's policies and procedures." Not having received an answer to Rauch's letter, the council Oct. 14 postponed final reading of the budget amendment. Smith's wife, Elizabeth Smith, the Beaufort County clerk of court, keeps the Drug Court records. On Friday, she said the court spent $6,230 to attend the annual conference of the National Association of Drug Court Professionals. Both Smiths, the court's program director, two counselors and two Beaufort County sheriff's deputies attended. Less than 6 percent of the court's $107,500 fiscal 2003 budget went toward the conference, according to Elizabeth Smith. "I'm bulletproof, and so are my people," Manning Smith said last Monday from his new office on Sams Point Road. He said he hadn't responded to the council's request for information because he received the mayor's fax late while in the process of moving from his offices on North Street. Smith said he doesn't get paid for his time in Drug Court, and hasn't since it began in July of 2001. He said he'll go elsewhere to get the money for this year's budget if he has to, but the city of Beaufort alone accounts for between 40 percent and 50 percent of his program participants. Last year Hilton Head and Beaufort each contributed $30,000 to the program and Beaufort County contributed $47,500. This year Hilton Head contributed $33,500, and Beaufort County $47,500. The city of Beaufort is the only government entity questioning the court's operations. Councilman Gary Fordham has joined Rauch in his concern over the Reno trip. On Friday he said he's concerned the court is "cryin' poor mouth," then going on trips. Councilmembers Billy Keyserling and Donnie Beer have remained supporters of the Drug Court, and Frank Glover has said little about the court, but voted to pass the first reading of the $30,000 budget amendment. The Reno conference, said Beer, is the only Drug Court conference in the country. "It's like any convention you go to, you go where the convention is." Karen Freeman-Wilson, executive director of the National Association for Drug Court Professionals, said it is the organization's largest meeting and provides the most comprehensive learning and training opportunities for all levels of Drug Court employees. "The reason it works is because we give a damn," Smith said last week. Drug Court enrollees are nonviolent offenders who agree to plead guilty to the charges they face in exchange for an opportunity to receive treatment for their drug-or alcohol-related addictions while avoiding jail time. It takes 15 to 18 months to graduate from the program. Of the 72 people who have signed on since Drug Court started in Beaufort County, 26 have graduated, 22 have dropped out and 24 remain enrolled. Dropping out before graduation means going back to court to face sentencing and possible jail time. Only two Drug Court participants have been re-arrested. Smith said it costs approximately $5,000 to send a person through Drug Court, but $30,000 to keep someone in prison a year. Nationally, about 22 percent of Drug Court graduates are re-arrested, compared to a 60 percent to 80 percent re-arrest rate for people sent straight to jail without an intervention program, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake