Pubdate: Mon, 24 Nov 2003 Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) Copyright: 2003 Lexington Herald-Leader Contact: http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240 Author: John Cheves DRUG COURTS ARE FACING A CRUNCH State Is Strapped But Grants Are Ending FRANKFORT - Kentucky's drug courts, which provide treatment rather than prison for non-violent criminals addicted to drugs, are running out of money. Even as the alternative courts gain credibility, the federal grants that launched them in more than half of the state's counties since 1993 are starting to expire. Gov.-elect Ernie Fletcher pledged in his campaign to expand drug courts to every county. But to maintain existing courts and allow for modest growth, he needs to find about $15 million in the two-year budget proposal he offers in January, court officials said. Paying for drug courts in all 120 counties could increase that to at least $18 million, they said. The U.S. Justice Department has paid most of the bills through start-up grants. But the burden will shift to the state, in large part next summer, said Connie Payne, drug courts manager for the Kentucky Administrative Office of the Courts. "The federal grants were only seed money," Payne said last week. "The feds did not expect the states to take this expense on without the drug courts proving themselves first," she said. "Unfortunately, just as we're proving successful, the state is in the middle of a financial crisis." During the campaign, Fletch-er's running mate, former U.S. Attorney Steve Pence, called drug courts one of the best tools for breaking the cycle of crime and addiction. It's certainly cheaper than the alternative. Putting the average addict through a year of drug court costs about $3,000, including urine screening at $5 a test; individual, group and family counseling; and case managers who track participants and report problems to the sentencing judges. Judges and other court officials who are involved already get salaries from the state. By comparison, Kentucky spends about $17,000 to imprison an addict for a year. In a bipartisan tone, Democratic and Republican legislators said money for drug courts should be a top priority, despite an estimated state revenue shortfall of more than $700 million next year. "There is no question they're well worth the money -- if we can find it," said Rep. Jesse Crenshaw, D-Lexington, who chairs the House budget subcommittee that oversees the courts. Senate Majority Leader Dan Kelly, R-Springfield, agreed: "For the cost of building a single new prison, we could implement drug courts statewide, and frankly get a much better return on our capital." Competition Is Increasing According to Payne, the Kentucky drug courts manager, federal grants set to expire next summer include those paying for drug courts in Lexington, Louisville, Covington, Owensboro and elsewhere. The state already pays some of the court costs in Lexington, she added. More federal start-up grants are on the way, including $1.8 million that U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., plans to announce today for new drug courts in Eastern Kentucky. But start-up grants last only two to three years. Complicating matters, the U.S. Justice Department has cut funding for its drug-court grants to about $45 million this year, and Kentucky is not going to receive any grants to continue its existing courts. "These grants are very competitive, and they're going to get more so as the pool of money shrinks," Justice Department spokeswoman Linda Mansour said. Kentucky's dilemma is typical, said Michael Bird, chief federal lobbyist for the National Conference of State Legislatures. The federal government is reducing its domestic spending just as the states can least afford to pay their own way, Bird said. "Until 1999, states were willing and able to pick up the tab for programs once federal money ran dry. Now states are more likely to cut back on the programs, or just let them die," Bird said. Counseling And Monitoring Drug courts give alcoholics and drug users a chance to avoid prison if they are charged with non-violent crimes related to their addictions. Drug-court participants receive intensive addiction counseling for one to two years. They report weekly to their sentencing judges, and more frequently than that to probation officers or case managers. For their first few months, their urine is checked three times a week for signs of drug use; later, urine tests are weekly. Juvenile addicts must stay in school and obey a curfew. Adult addicts must hold jobs and advance their education, particularly if they're school dropouts. In Fayette County, for example, judges have assigned book reports to defendants in their 30s and 40s. Kentucky's drug courts have graduated more than 1,000 people. But the program is hardly a cure-all: It's not uncommon for participants to relapse into drug use at least once. On average, fewer than half of the participants graduate. The rest quit or are tossed out for chronic violations. The lost cases return to the regular court system, where a traditional sentence typically had been put on hold. Those who succeed tend to fare better in life than defendants who don't enter or complete drug court. A 2001 study of the state's original drug courts, in Louisville, Lexington and Bowling Green, concluded that graduates were less likely to be rearrested within 12 months, and more likely to hold jobs and pay child support. One of those graduates, George Moorman, said he's proof that throwing an addict behind bars is wasteful. Moorman, 51, ended decades of cocaine use and theft after a judge diverted him to Fayette County's drug court during the mid-1990s. Today, Moorman works at the Mayor's Training Center in Lexington, educating parents on their obligation to pay child support. He's also studying at the University of Kentucky for a doctorate in psychology and counseling. He said he hopes to help other addicts. "I want to go back to the streets," he said, "and help clean up some of what I messed up." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)