Pubdate: Thu, 29 May 2003 Source: Albany Herald, The (GA) Contact: http://www.albanyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1747 Author: Alan Maudlin DRUG PROGRAM SUCCESS A drug education program at the Dougherty County Jail is shaping up as a success. ALBANY - County prisoners are not only cutting time off their sentences by attending drug-education courses, the inmates and others convicted of drug offenses are also picking up the tab for the classes. The program has reaped $162,000 in savings for taxpayers in a little more than two years and is credited with dramatically reducing the number of drug offenders who return for more county hospitality, the Dougherty County Sheriff's Department said. The department briefed the Dougherty County Commission Wednesday on the progress of the Controlled Substance Education Program begun in January 2002. The notion of drug offenders paying for classes that help keep them out of jail is impressing some county residents aware of the program. "I think people who perpetuate the crime ought to pay for the drugs they do," said Gerald Davis, 66, of Albany as he headed into a drug store in East Albany Wednesday afternoon. "I like the idea" of the education program. Davis said that drug users prey on the community by stealing to support their habit. The program at the Dougherty jail is paid for with a 50-percent surcharge tacked on top of fines imposed by judges on those convicted of possession, manufacture, transaction and sales of controlled substances. State law allows the funds to be used for education programs. In calculating the savings, the sheriff's department calculated the amount of good credit days accrued by inmates. Inmates who finish the program get one day shaved off their sentence for each seven days served. Inmates may either be ordered into the program by a judge or, if they have a history of drug use, apply to take the class, said sheriff's Cpl. Thomas Kendrick Jr., who heads the program. Kendrick said of the 138 offenders who took the classes and have been released, only 13 percent, or 18 offenders, have returned to jail. That's compared with a 50 percent-plus recidivism rate for drug offenders who didn't enroll in the program. Kendrick said he thinks the program is worthwhile. "If we can help one person, I feel we did something positive," he said. Albany resident Dee Motley said the classes sound like a good idea "if it keeps them off drugs." "That's good. Maybe it will rehabilitate them," Motley, 50, said as she sat in a pickup truck outside Harvey's Supermarket on Sylvester Road Thursday afternoon. "It sounds like it's helping." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh