Pubdate: Wed, 18 Dec 2004
Source: Sun-Reporter (San Francisco, CA)
Copyright: 2004 Sun-Reporter Publishing Company
Contact:  http://www.mapinc.org/media/3645
Website: http://www.sunreporter.com/
Author: Chauncey Bailey
Cited: National Black Caucus of State Legislators http://www.nbcsl.com/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?140 (Rockefeller Drug Laws)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

BLACK LEGISLATORS: DRUG WAR HAS FAILED

Eyeing the failure of California voters to repeal Three Strikes laws, the 
National Black Caucus of State Legislators has approved a resolution 
condemning the "war on drugs" and calling for "alternatives to failed polices."

Among their suggestions: work to repeal mandatory minimum sentences, and 
divert non-violent drug offenders into treatment programs. "The National 
Black Caucus of State Legislators made history last weekend by passing a 
resolution that both condemns the war on drugs and commits the lawmakers to 
developing alternatives," said a statement to the media. "The resolution 
was sponsored by Delegate Salima Marriott of Maryland. Specifically, it 
singles out issues like reform of mandatory minimum sentences and diversion 
of nonviolent drug offenders into treatment."

The resolution states, in part, "The war on drugs has failed and while 
states have continually increased their expenditures to wage the war on 
drugs, policies which rely heavily on arrest and incarceration have proved 
costly and ineffective at addressing these issues."

The move was echoed by others. "The war on drugs is failing everybody, but 
no one is being devastated by it like African Americans," said Michael 
Blain, director of public policy at the Drug Policy Alliance. "That's why 
it's so historic that the people who represent the communities who have the 
most to gain from reform are taking the lead in addressing this problem, 
and finding solutions."

Critics of the war on drugs point out the extreme racial disparities in 
application of drug laws. According to Human Rights Watch, while Blacks and 
whites have similar rates of drug use, Blacks go to jail at 13 times the 
rate of whites. Although African Americans comprise only 12.2 percent of 
the population, they make up 38 percent of those arrested for drug offenses 
and 59 percent of those convicted of drug offenses.

In New York, 93 percent of those incarcerated under the state's Rockefeller 
drug laws are African American and Latino. The resolution says: "The war on 
drugs has failed: every community in the U.S. contends with the harmful 
effects of drug misuse and related problems, and while states have 
continually increased their expenditures to wage the war on drugs, policies 
which rely heavily on arrest and incarceration have proved costly and 
ineffective at addressing these issues," said the statement from Black 
lawmakers.

"The war on drugs is a major force driving the incarceration of over 2.1 
million people in the United States, with African Americans 
disproportionately represented in our country's overflowing jails and 
prisons and the war on drugs perpetuates mandatory minimums, felony 
disfranchisement, disproportionate over-incarceration, poor access to 
health care, under funded public education, widespread unemployment, and 
the general criminalization of communities of color in the U.S. "And paying 
for the war on drugs means spending limited tax dollars on failed policies 
instead of proven solutions. Americans spend approxi- mately $140 billion 
annually on prisons and jails including $24 billion spent on incarcerating 
over 1.2 million non-violent offenders. In many states (such as New York 
and California), spending on prisons far surpasses spending on education."

The legislators also noted the need for "access to affordable 
community-based drug treatment, along with educational and economic 
opportunities,"which have shown to be successful at reducing the harms of 
drug misuse, "yet more than half of those Americans in need of drug 
treatment do not have access to it."

African Americans are less likely to sell or misuse illicit drugs than 
white Americans, said the Black lawmakers "but African Americans experience 
highly dis- proportionate levels of death, disease, crime and suffering due 
both to drug misuse and to misguided drug policies."

The resolution also noted: "our common goal is to advocate those policies 
which increase the health and welfare of our communities, and to reduce the 
unacceptable racial disparities both in criminal justice and in access to 
drug treatment and other services."

The legislations vowed to take steps to reduce the incarceration of 
non-violent offenders and increase the availability of treatment because 
"it not only makes fiscal sense, but is sound public policy that is being 
implemented in states throughout the country (such as Maryland and 
California)."

The 28th annual Legislative Conference of the National Black Caucus of 
State Legislastors met in Philadephia. Attendees also called for ways to 
ensure that new legislation includes "quantifiable, measurable goals, and 
is measured by a standard that reduces the effects of substance abuse and 
addiction and the harm of unjust drug policies while increasing public 
safety, thereby creating a New Bottom Line.

They also want to create state task forces "to research and report on the 
allocation of state expenditures for all public education and health 
services and the war on drugs so that states can understand the real cost 
of the war on drugs in the state budgets and in their communities and work 
with the Drug Policy Alliance to create seminars that provide a thorough 
overview on harm reduction principles and legislative reform initiatives."

They also want to advance a drug policy agenda that prioritizes a public 
health, not a criminal justice approach, to drug policy.