Pubdate: Fri, 10 Sep 2004 Source: Greenville News (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Greenville News Contact: http://greenvillenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/877 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) JAIL, TREATMENT BOTH NECESSARY Greenville County should move ahead with its plan to expand the jail, but it must also invest in drug, alcohol treatment. Greenville County needs both an adequate jail to relieve oppressive crowding and treatment options for drug and alcohol abusers who cost our county tens of millions of dollars each year. The County Council is divided on which is the more pressing need. But pitting one priority against another is counterproductive. Both sides should concede what is obvious and reasonable: Greenville urgently needs to expand its jail, and this county also needs to increase its commitment to treating substance abuse. The majority of the council - most vocally the Republicans - stands firmly behind a jail expansion plan that could cost up to $23 million. It would add desperately needed beds to the Greenville County Detention Center, and it would also add a juvenile detention facility. Right now the jail averages about 1,200 inmates. But the jail only has about 950 beds. With such crowding, this county must create more bed space or risk facing sanctions. District 25 Democrat Lottie Gibson, the most vocal critic of jail expansion, is rightly concerned about the breathtaking growth of the jail population. In just five years, the jail population has increased by 50 percent, from about 800 inmates on average in 1999 to more than 1,200 inmates per day now. Greenville is not alone. Richland and Charleston counties have also experienced rapid inmate growth. But none is as dramatic as Greenville's. Gibson wants the county to invest in more substance abuse treatment. She makes her case by directly linking the crowding problem with the prevalence of drug and alcohol abuse in Greenville County. Most crimes, Gibson notes, are influenced by the use of drugs and alcohol - from domestic violence to countless property crimes. But Greenville has a poor record of offering treatment to addicts. A study commissioned by county's Alcohol and Drug Abuse Center estimates that more than 30,000 Greenville County residents are in need of treatment. The Phoenix Center, which receives 1 percent of its budget from the county and offers reasonably priced substance abuse treatment, has just 16 beds. Private providers are mostly out of reach of the indigent - the drug abusers who are most likely to contribute to the jail crowding. An investment in treatment and prevention has proven to be wise. It is far more costly to repeatedly incarcerate and prosecute those offenders who might be receptive to treatment. Not all addicts are. Treatment is a road riddled with failure, and is successfully navigated only by those addicts fully committed to wellness. Still, it is worthwhile for the county to identify those addicts receptive to treatment and provide them with help. This county's successful Drug Court is predicated on that concept. It allows participants to avoid jail by completing a strict outpatient program. Our county should support duplicating that kind of success. Building a safe, adequate jail and providing substance abusers with treatment are not mutually exclusive. The County Council must value both, and each side must agree that both are necessary. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D