Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jun 2003 Source: Post-Standard, The (NY) Copyright: 2003, Syracuse Post-Standard Contact: http://www.syracuse.com/poststandard/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/686 Author: Aaron Gifford COUNTY WANTS DRUG COURT Treatment Program Already Established in Other Counties Joseph Traficanti Jr. calls himself the "original skeptic." Through the mid-1990s, the former Ulster County judge believed in the state's Rockefeller Drug Laws and the notion that all drug offenders should receive harsh punishment. Courts, he said, had no business getting involved with social work or community partnerships that promote treatment over incarceration. But Traficanti, now a state deputy chief administrative judge, had a change of heart after he attended a drug court commencement in Rochester and saw a tearful graduate thank the judge for saving his life. Similar programs for nonviolent drug offenders were being formed across the country, and the former skeptic himself was later responsible for the formation of treatment courts in 62 New York counties. "What really impressed me was there's no politics to it," Traficanti told an audience of police officers, judges, health-care workers and human service workers at the Madison County Domestic Violence Coalition's semiannual meeting Wednesday at New Beginnings Free Methodist Church in Wampsville. "All sides of the political spectrum seemed to be supportive of this." Today, Traficanti said, every county in New York state either has one drug court or is forming one. Madison County would be the last Central New York county to start a drug-treatment court. Oswego, Onondaga, Cayuga and Oneida counties have drug treatment courts. Madison County Judge Dennis McDermott has applied for a startup grant and could have a program in place next year. The program allows defendants to have criminal charges dismissed after successfully completing of the treatment program under judicial supervision. In order to graduate, candidates must get a job or earn a General Education Development diploma if they don't already have a high school diploma, and remain sober for one year. In some counties or cities, participants see the judge every day. "Most thought it was the easy way out. It's not," Traficanti said. "They tell you they're afraid to disappoint you. The black robe helps. Street thugs say, 'I'm afraid to mess up because I'm afraid to face the judge.' "I thought at first, giving them a (graduation) certificate was kind of Mickey Mouse," Traficanti said. "But for some of these folks, it's the first time in their entire life they had something with their name on it that they could hang on their wall. They absolutely cherish it. And how many of these folks have ever had anybody applaud for them?" A successful drug-treatment court program requires tremendous collaboration between the courts, social services departments and other agencies that can help the drug offender with transportation, child care and financial issues. In the beginning, Traficanti said, judges, prosecutors and defense lawyers may have difficulty grasping its non-adversarial approach. "Just changing the culture, the thinking, is very difficult for us lawyers," he said. "It's a hard sell in some places." Yet the intensive team effort saves the state and counties money, Traficanti said. It costs about $30,000 a year to house a drug offender in jail. By contrast, he said, inpatient treatment for nonviolent drug offenders is $18,400 per year and outpatient treatment is $5,100. A 1999 Erie County Department of Social Services study found that the Lackawanna Drug Court saved the county $2.1 million in Medicaid, child foster care, food stamps and cash assistance programs. Its graduating class of 152 people avoided public entitlements because they were able to work, maintain custody of their children, remain healthy and give birth to healthy babies, the study said. Madison County Social Services Commissioner James Cary likes the concept of a drug-treatment court in the county. "In some counties it worked very well," he said. "It allows us another option to save some money and save some lives." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake