Pubdate: Mon, 30 Aug 2004 Source: Greenville News (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Greenville News Contact: http://greenvillenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/877 Author: Ben Szobody, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) COSTLY NEW JAIL IGNORES REAL PROBLEM, COUNCILWOMAN SAYS There are city blocks on Greenville's Westside where, in the morning hours, there is someone lounging on nearly every porch, and almost every person knows someone who has been to jail. In many of those cases, they say drugs or alcohol played a role in sending them there. Kim Sullivan said local inmates are left to "dry out" without any sort of program to help them quit habits and learn skills. So they sit and eat and contemplate the next drink. County Councilwoman Lottie Gibson, a well-known champion of drug treatment, is blasting the county's new jail expansion plan as a waste of taxpayer money because she says it plasters over an underlying "crisis" in drug and alcohol abuse. Many in black neighborhoods agree with her. Council Republicans say overcrowding has made jail expansion unavoidable and that drug and alcohol treatment is being handled by state and private agencies the way it should be. Gibson, a 12-year council Democrat and the longest-serving representative, has fruitlessly proposed construction of a county-funded drug treatment center for inmates for years. It's an option she views as a more direct antidote to local crime, since she thinks as much as 80 percent is related to drugs or alcohol. Sullivan knows about the county plans to build a bigger jail. She agrees that convicts should do the time they deserve. But she said it seems to her that county government cares only that offenders serve their time, not whether they kick their habits or contribute to the economy. Drug treatment and detention center officials say the number of local crimes where alcohol or drugs are involved is huge - easily a majority - although Maj. Michelle Melton, the jail administrator, said specific numbers aren't available. At issue is a fundamental political difference: Republicans on the council say alcohol and drug abuse are personal choices that should be addressed by the private sector, or punished by the public sector when they turn criminal. At least three of the four Democrats believe such addiction is an illness that needs medical treatment. "Why should we build a jail when we need a hospital?" said Gibson, representative from the heavily black District 25. "They're not even putting a Band-Aid on the problem by holding these people down there. We need to treat the core problem of why they're in jail." Instead, she said the state's biggest and wealthiest county, a "quote-unquote Christian community," ignores a fundamental problem affecting the county and its jail by refusing to take on drug and alcohol treatment for inmates and neighborhood addicts. Melton said the state Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services provides some counselors to inmates as its budget allows, although the program is limited. Kat Rice, executive director of the Phoenix Center, run by the county's Commission on Drug and Alcohol Abuse, said those programs affect very few inmates. Her agency, which gets 1 percent of its annual budget from the county, provides treatment at clients' expense, although Gibson and Rice said the efforts don't begin to suffice for community-wide change and the hundreds of inmates who need help. The aim of a larger project, Gibson said, would be restoration so inmates "can become taxpayers instead of tax receivers." Rice said the county wouldn't have to pay for a new building to provide such a systemwide program, but could pay for counselors to do intensive drug treatment inside the detention center. Scott Case, council vice chairman, said Gibson wants to take on a problem that's not the county's responsibility. "Regulation and jurisdiction of alcohol- and drug-abuse crime and laws falls under the jurisdiction of the state," Case said. "Our job ... is to utilize taxpayer resources as efficiently as we can in carrying out sentencing and punishment of those who commit crimes." To inject a "philosophical" debate over substance abuse treatment into the county's process of expanding the jail amounts to bad timing, he said. Streamlined jail plan The revamped jail plan presented by Brausch and County Administrator Joe Kernell to the County Council recently will begin with the expansion of the adult detention center. It will make use of alternative sentencing methods and efficient "modular" jail design to reduce the jail population while adding most of the new beds contained in a consultant's earlier proposal, but at about half the cost and in half the space, according to both presenters. Later phases will entail a new juvenile detention center, renovations in another jail building and eventually moving offices to make more room for more inmates. The $21.7 million to $23.7 million total price tag, meanwhile, is roughly the same as the consultant's cost for the first phase alone. All but one of the council's Republican members lauded the revamped jail blueprint as a model of getting the most bang for the buck. Councilman Mark Kingsbury said he wishes the county didn't have to spend the money on a new jail, but it's become unavoidable. The alternative, he said, would be to avoid the overcrowding issue until the state forces the county to build a facility that could cost twice as much. The jail population last week was hovering around 1,200 inmates, Melton said. The jail has about 950 qualified beds, Brausch has said. Gibson said overcrowded conditions could serve as a crime deterrent, and the county's avoidance of the underlying substance abuse "crisis" boils down to a lack of compassion. "It's typical Lottie Gibson," said Councilman Steve Selby, who is up for re-election in District 18. "Her priority is to get lawbreakers who have drug and alcohol problems out of the jail and into a hospital environment. "I believe criminals belong in jail no matter what particular problem caused them to commit crimes." Republican Bob Taylor said he agrees that the black community in particular has a drug and alcohol problem that correlates to local crime, but he would prefer more stringent enforcement of existing alcohol laws. "We're actually stealing the economic future from our black communities with our lottery and our liquor stores," he said. Still, "I don't know that people's habits are something that's our responsibility. It's a choice they make, and when they break the law you arrest them." Case said Gibson has backed a bricks-and-mortar drug treatment center as long as he's been on the council but that the county's role is incarceration and punishment. County's problem? Cort Flint, a District 24 Democrat, said while there's no way around building a new jail, the issue of drug abuse is big enough to warrant the county's attention. "I have enough education about that subject to believe that it's not just a choice," Flint said. "I think it's too well-documented that it's a medical disease." He added, "People aren't willing to face that, and that's a problem." Judy Gilstrap, a first-term Democrat, said the new jail is an urgent issue that needs addressing, but she would also be "strongly in favor" of addressing underlying substance abuse. "Whether it's an illness or not, I don't know," she said. Brausch was appointed interim administrator by Taylor last year and headed up the effort to streamline the previous jail expansion plan. He responded to Gibson's criticism of the plan he presented by noting he doesn't disagree with her claim that prevention should be a priority. "I'm very sympathetic to that, because obviously if we can keep people from getting into trouble we wouldn't have to house them," Brausch said, adding that he had hoped alternative sentencing programs would be enough to address the county's overcrowding issue. Still, "Our assignment was not prevention," he said. "Our assignment was overcrowding in the detention center." Gibson said there's small likelihood anyone will change the council's priorities now, although she said it's high time taxpayers hear how the county is misspending their money by focusing on incarceration instead of a treatment center for the underlying illness. "I've already proposed it so many times it isn't funny," she said, "but it never gets out to people in the community." Democrats Flint, Gilstrap and Xanthene Norris said they would consider a county-funded treatment center for inmates. Kingsbury, Selby, Taylor and Case, all Republicans, said the need should be addressed by private and state groups. Kingsbury said he believes substance abuse is a "personal choice," and "until you hit rock bottom and make a decision you want to change, you're not going to change." Flint said he doesn't know all the history behind Gibson's frustration, but he knows what he's seen in three-plus years on the council. "Every year I've seen Lottie Gibson ask for money she says she has been promised by County Council in the past for drug and alcohol abuse," Flint said. Regardless of her specific aims, he said, the substance abuse that leads to crime "is a serious enough problem that this county ought to be facing it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D