Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jul 2004 Source: Mountain Xpress (NC) Copyright: 2004 Mountain Xpress Contact: http://www.mountainx.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/941 Author: Carl Mumpower Cited: Law Enforcement Against Prohibition http://leap.cc/ Referenced: PUB LTE by Jerry Epstein http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n981/a01.html TIME FOR TRUCE WITH TEXAS & WAR ON DUDU When I first made the decision to turn toward our city's hard-drug problem, I anticipated shin-busting hurdles, personal attacks, misinterpretations and manipulations of my motives, philosophical differences with some colleagues on City Council. I even expected a few myopic mud pies from Mr. Molton [Xpress cartoonist], and I had no doubts that the hard-drug dealers and users would be less than tickled with my labors. I did not, however, expect that my stumbling efforts would stimulate wrath from the good state of Texas. The most recent letter from advocates of "Law Enforcement Against Prohibition" chastises me for supporting prohibition and deluding the public into "thinking that something beyond frantic activity and wasted tax dollars is going on" [Letters, July 7]. I'm not exactly sure what all that means, but I suppose these folks think our national drug war is a failed endeavor that should not be perpetrated by local government. Our Texas friends would get no argument from me on that count. What I would argue is their lack of awareness of what we are really trying to do, and their attempted application of a national policy (over which we have no control) to a local situation (over which we do have some measure of influence). With the patience of our Texas friends, I would like to summarize just what I, and others, have been proposing to do to address our hard-drug problem in Asheville (as in North Carolina). 1) My interest has been specifically in our hard-drug problem. With no wish to be malicious, marijuana addiction makes a person an airhead - hard-drug addiction makes a person, any person, a predator. 2) This has never been about arresting more people and putting them in jail. It has been about making the sale and purchase of hard drugs significantly less convenient than the open-air-market conditions that currently exist throughout our city. Done right, we arrest less people, get more hard-drug addicts into meaningful treatment, and decrease the number of dealers by cutting into their profits and customer base. 3) The national drug war focuses on targeting where the drugs come from and the money goes to; [our local] effort is about addressing where the drugs come to and the money comes from. If we don't address the demand, we will never successfully decrease the supply. 4) Every drug buyer who stops buying or goes elsewhere (if you must buy drugs, please buy them in your own hometown - not ours) becomes one less person helping to poison a neighborhood, misguide a child, support violent crime, rip something off or otherwise corrupt our community. 5) The 21-point hard-drug intervention plan that Councilmen Dunn, Davis and myself supported, placed primary emphasis on services, support and "holistic" interventions - but we made sure that these were grounded in 24-hour street-level drug interdiction in all neighborhoods where drugs are a problem. Holistic interventions without law-enforcement interventions have been demonstrated to be as wasteful and futile as our national drug policy. 6) Of great importance to me personally is the strong potential to save people who [would otherwise] become drug dealers or users tomorrow, by limiting the convenience, opportunity, access and license to deal and use hard drugs in Asheville today. It might be fun to continue fencing with our friends from Texas, but the real place for persistence is for the streets and neighborhoods of Asheville. Sadly, Drug Users and Dealers United (you can figure out the abbreviation) will continue to work to increase their and our misery factor to the point we have to take more steps to resist the harm. With that in mind, I hereby declare a truce with the boys from Texas - there are more menacing forces much closer to home. Carl Mumpower Vice-Mayor City of Asheville - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake