Pubdate: Thu, 22 May 2003 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2003 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Nick Davies Note: To access other items in this series, click this link: http://www.mapinc.org/source/Guardian HOW BRITAIN IS LOSING THE DRUGS WAR Today, the Guardian launches the biggest investigation of the criminal justice system ever conducted by a British newspaper. Beginning a series which will run throughout the year, Nick Davies looks at the government's attempt to deal with the most prolific of offenders - the drug users who commit an estimated 7.5 million crimes a year. - ----- Richard Elliott couldn't stand it any more. For nearly two years, he had been acting as the government's drugs envoy in Bristol, running the city's drugs action team, handling millions of pounds a year, linking together police, health and social workers and voluntary agencies into one big drive against drugs, but earlier this year he realised he couldn't stand it any more, so he quit. In fact, for most of that time he wasn't supposed to be running the drugs action team (DAT), but his coordinator had quit a year earlier because she couldn't stand it any more either and so Elliott, who was supposed to be the commissioning manager, had taken on her job as well. He didn't want to do that; he knew of at least four other DAT coordinators in the area who had gone off sick in the previous 12 months. He did at least have some help but his new colleague was soon working so hard that he started getting chest pains and, when he carried on regardless, his left arm started tingling and going purple until finally he couldn't stand it any more and went off sick. Then he quit too. Elliott could no longer bear the waste. He had six staff and a budget of UKP3.5m a year. He had a potential client group of 25,000 recreational users of cocaine and amphetamine, ecstasy and cannabis; plus a further 12,500 chaotic drug users who buy heroin and crack cocaine on the city's open drugs market, centred on St Paul's. He focused on the 4,500 chaotic users who live in Bristol but at the end of all his work and all that public money, the total number of NHS detox beds which he was able to provide to help any of those users was five, one of which was reserved for those with mental illness. Even more than that, what Elliott really couldn't stand was the bureaucracy - the 44 different funding streams, each one with its own detailed guidance and micro targets from the centre, each one with its own demand for a detailed business plan and quarterly reports back to the centre; the endless service agreements he had to sign with every local provider with their own micro targets and a demand for quarterly reports back to him so that he could collate them and pass them back to the centre; the new annual drugs availability report to the centre; the annual treatment plan to the centre over 68 pages and nine planning grids with 82 objectives (that's what Elliott's colleague was working on when his arm went purple); the funding announced too late for planning and then handed over too late to be spent and finally spent for spending's sake to prevent it being reclaimed by the centre; the staff hired and trained and then suddenly sacked when funding or targets were switched by the centre, (or just quitting because they couldn't stand it any more). He reckoned he and his staff spent only 40% of their time organising services for drug users - the rest of their time was consumed by producing paper plans and paper reports for Whitehall. Elliott wrote a resignation memo for a colleague with the heading "Ravings of a burned-out mind". He described the culture of control in Whitehall, their "monitoring fetish" and their short-term thinking, and he wrote: "Monitoring has become almost religious in its status, as has centralised control ... The demand for quick hits and early wins is driven by a central desire analogous to the instant gratification demands made by drug users themselves ... The criminal gangs that control the market are laughing all the way to the bank and beyond, as we tie ourselves in knots with good practice guidelines and monitoring. It's like trying to fight with one hand tied behind your back, a boxing glove on the other and strict instructions not to punch." When the government declares its intention to attack the causes of crime, it signals its intelligence - its understanding that it cannot control crime simply by using the ancient and inefficient levers of conventional criminal justice. When it goes on to identify those causes, it can see through the endless confusion two huge social turbines generating criminality. One of them is the boom in child poverty during the Thatcher years with all of the profound and intricate damage which that inflicted physically and emotionally, socially and spiritually, and the government can see that, to undo that damage, it will need to invest several generations of intense and skilful political effort. It may decide (as it has) that it is worth doing, but it takes that route knowing that it will be long and uncertain. But the second great engine of crime is different - the war against drugs. That is finite and tangible, with drug users blamed for 7.5 million offences a year, up to 90% of all property crime in some areas. And any government can see that, by taking finite and tangible steps on drugs, it can score a real impact on crime and disorder and, what is more, it can save lives and restore communities. In 1998 the government launched a national campaign of treatment, creating a network of 149 drug action teams, reinforced since the autumn of 2001 by a new national treatment agency (NTA), fuelled by the belief that by promoting treatment alongside law enforcement it could finally generate success where criminal justice alone had failed. But if the drug action teams collapse, then that collapse is on the same spectacular scale - a disaster for the whole strategy on crime but a disaster too for black market drug users and for the communities they have wrecked. The reality is that, after five years of effort and with a budget now topping UKP400m a year, despite relentlessly hard work from some 5,000 dedicated people on the ground, there is an alarming shortage of effective treatment and no sign of a reduction in demand for drugs. Richard Elliott describes an organisation which is being managed to death, where centralised direction has mutated into systematic suffocation. The government says the DATs must do the work; so the DATs must prove they are working; and very quickly the proving becomes their work. Elliott's explanation is simple: "They don't know very much about drugs, but they do know about management and monitoring and data collec tion. So that's what they do." In early 2000, the Home Office decided to spend UKP5m on Prospects hostels so that drug users leaving prison could have a bed with special treatment. Since then, the Home Office's Prison Service have a) chosen five pilots areas, including Bristol, b) set up a new team to manage the project, c) gone through a rigorous tendering process to select providers, d) produced a detailed specification for the hostel regime, e) transferred "ownership" of the project to the national probation directorate who set up a new team to manage it who, f) converted the regime into a set of operating manuals and g) held numerous meetings with DATs to monitor progress, and h) asked DATs to develop "a methodology for site search and selection", and i) to set up local planning teams to draft, consult on and agree referral protocols, after which, j) they set up local project boards and k) this February they held a press launch. But there was nothing to launch. After three years of work, they have consumed hundreds of hours in meetings, spent hundreds of thousand of pounds but have not yet provided a single bed for a single drug-using ex-prisoner in Bristol or anywhere else. They say it may happen "as early as 2004" although only in the five pilot areas which will then be subject to a three-year evaluation. Just before Christmas last year, a 20-year-old prisoner named Sean Wildman, who had been sent to Exeter prison with a drug problem, died on the streets of Bristol, homeless and stuffed full of black market heroin. Over and over again, Elliott found that a problem was confronted not with a solution but with a bureaucratic process. Problem: there are not enough detox beds. Solution: pay for some more. What the DAT had to do: rewrite the service level agreements with local providers; increase their targets by 10%; conduct an audit to measure the gap between the detox they had and the detox they needed; cut the funds to meet an NHS efficiency target. Outcome: no change yet. Problem: there are not enough rehab places. Solution: pay for some more. What the DAT had to do: audit and review existing rehab places; join a regional review of rehab places; hand over UKP5,000 from their treatment budget, along with all the other local DATs, to fund a new regional offical to take over central purchasing of rehab; set up an inquiry into the need for special rehab places for black, Asian and women users - and, of course, all this had to be recorded on planning grids, most of which then had to be rewritten to improve its performance score. Outcome: no change yet. Problem: users come out of rehab with nowhere to live. Solution: find them somewhere to live. What the DAT was required to do: conduct a review of residential treatment services in Bristol; set up a special integrated care pathways group to liaise between agencies; develop a new protocol between treatment and housing; set up a waiting times group to monitor waiting times and the implementation of the protocol. Outcome: no change yet. The result on the ground is that the government has created a multimillion-pound collection of signposts. There are 15 different agencies in Bristol swapping referrals, making assessments and providing leaflets. There is a specialist agency for black people and another for Asians and five for particularly troubled estates. There is no shortage of information for drug users. There is masses of advice and support. There is anger management and debt management and counselling, both group and individual. There is aromatherapy and acupuncture and careers advice and nutritional advice. This could help new users or old users who have given up. But where on this tragic roundabout is the treatment which is going to transform the life of a career criminal who has spent the last 10 years on heroin? The answer is that down on the ground floor of the vast edifice of drug treatment, there is a small door which occasionally opens to allow a handful of users to proceed down a corridor of smaller and smaller doors. The first door is marked "detox" and, in Bristol, it leads to a room which has five beds in it, from the National Health Service. A simple detox takes a fortnight, so on the face of it, each of these beds can handle 26 patients a year, a total of 130. In reality, however, one of the beds is always reserved for drug users who are mentally ill; the other four beds may sometimes be used as an emergency overflow for mentally ill patients who are drug free; and any of the beds can be used for more than two weeks if the user has extra problems (Aids, hepatitis, other addictions). In reality, in a year, they expect to admit only 96 drug users. A little further down the corridor, are two even smaller doors. One leads to the Salvation Army who keep five more detox beds which are purchased by the DAT, potentially serving a further 130 drug users. But one of these is reserved for alcoholics. And the other four are reserved only for those who are "vulnerable and entrenched rough sleepers". Those who can get through this door tend to have more problems than the NHS users and occupy each bed for longer and so, in a year, they expect to admit only 80 drug users. The second small door leads to "home detox", where the user is visited by a nurse and given medication to help. Eighty users a year can squeeze through here. So, from the 4,500 chaotic users with Bristol addresses who are targeted by the DAT, only 256 will have access to detox. And the doors beyond this are smaller still. Detox is not magic; it can be very hard, and some of the detox beds nationally are in grim mental health wards. With the NHS and Salvation Army beds, at least 40% will fail to complete their detox. With home detox, 60% are expected to fail. On that basis, of the 256 who start, no more than 138 will stay the course and be ready for rehab. But the fact that they are ready does not mean they will reach the end of the corridor. The two main rehab houses in Bristol require total abstinence, not only from illegal drugs but also from prescribed drugs, like anti-depressants, and also from alcohol; some simply cannot face it. Those who remain will have to wait up to 20 weeks for a place; some will give up and go back to their drug. Those who persist must be assessed and means-tested by community care ; some will fail to meet the criteria. Some of those who survive will be mothers with children. Until last year, they could take their children with them to rehab, but then they changed the accounting rules so that the child's part of the budget was allocated to the children's directorate which refused to pay, which means some mothers cannot take the place they have been offered. Last year, the Bristol DAT finally placed only 55 of its detoxed drug users in rehab. Sixteen dropped out before their course was completed. Twenty-nine completed the course and, at the time of writing, nine were still there. For this maximum of 38 drug users who complete rehab, one more narrow door remains. Will they remain drug free? This last door leads nowhere. They may get support from their family or from Narcotics Anonymous but, so far as the state is concerned, there is effectively no more help. Past experience suggests that within six months, 45% will be back on their drug. On that basis, only 21 of these users will reach the end of the corridor of narrowing doors. Using DAT funds, Bristol social services will send some of their top-sliced from the treatment budget. In Bristol, Richard Elliott has now been replaced by a new coordinator and a temporary manager. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake