Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2004 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) JOHN P. WALTERS 'TAKES FIVE' Random drug testing as public health tool John P. Walters, director of national drug control policy and President Bush's "drug czar," was in Milwaukee Thursday to address members of the National Association of Drug Court Professionals. Walters' strategy for fighting the war on drugs involves reducing both supply of and demand for illegal substances. He discussed that strategy and drug addiction issues with Journal Sentinel reporter Gina Barton. Q. You support random student drug testing, and are visiting a school in Pewaukee where such testing is done. Why is random testing of students a good thing? A. Random student drug testing allows us to use the knowledge that we have that substance abuse is a disease of the brain and to apply public health measures such as screening and testing that have been used to reduce other diseases in our society.. . . It's important to emphasize that random student drug testing may not be used to punish. Under the law, it must be confidential, and it may only be used as a way to get help for the young person who may test positive for controlled substances.. . . Once we recognize that addiction is a disease and a disease that we catch in childhood, we begin to understand why it is so valuable to use better screening. Q. What do you say to those critics who believe random student drug testing is a violation of civil rights and the right to privacy? A. That concern is based on a misunderstanding. It's not about punishment. It's about keeping people healthy.. . . Drug abuse in the United States is a pediatric-onset disease. Why not use a public health tool - screening - as we do with so many other childhood diseases, and prevent the onset before they go down the path of destruction? Q. What is the philosophy behind drug courts? A. Drug treatment courts are another powerful tool that allows us to apply the knowledge that addiction is a disease.. . . It takes people who are non-violent drug offenders and puts them into a judicial process that directs them toward treatment and gives them the incentive to complete treatment and get into recovery. . . . This is a way to keep them off the path that in too many cases ends in a jail cell. Q. Tell me about your office's marijuana initiative. A. Marijuana is the single biggest area of ignorance that we have to correct. Today's marijuana is many times more potent.. . . We've had a doubling of emergency room cases involving marijuana, either people seeking treatment for addiction or as the result of accidents. Sixty percent of the estimated 7 million people we have to treat for addiction are dependent on marijuana. Nationally, more teens seek treatment for marijuana than for all other drugs combined. Q. What do you say to those who believe marijuana is a "soft drug" that should be legalized? A. The belief that marijuana is a soft drug is a myth. Marijuana is the single biggest treatment need.. . . We are living in the past if we believe marijuana is not a serious drug of abuse.. . . The ignorance about it has led to its use and has led young people into trouble. For those who think it's a soft drug and it should be legalized, it's time to look at the facts. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh