Pubdate: Sun, 22 Feb 2004
Source: Birmingham News, The (AL)
Copyright: 2004 The Birmingham News
Contact:  http://al.com/birminghamnews/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

LACKING TREATMENT

Fast Paroles Slowed By Wait For Drug Rehab

The state Department of Corrections has a waiting list of 7,000 prisoners 
needing drug treatment. This has meaning beyond the state prisoners who 
need treatment to help straighten out their lives. This is also a matter 
that should upset all Alabama taxpayers.

As everyone knows, state prisons are dangerously overcrowded. Both state 
and federal courts have ordered the state to take steps to remedy crowding 
problems.

One way Gov. Bob Riley has chosen to address the problem is to expand the 
state's Board of Pardons and Paroles in order to parole more convicts. And, 
indeed, the expanded parole board is hearing more requests and granting 
more paroles.

But even that has highlighted yet another problem in the state's criminal 
justice system: an underinvestment in drug-treatment programs.

Some nonviolent felons up for parole before the board have been turned away 
because they haven't completed drug rehabilitation. In fact, it's become 
such a regular occurrence at parole hearings that it's one factor that more 
than half of those up for early release are denied.

As of early last week, of the 1,896 cases heard by the board since 
December, only 879 had been approved. No one knows how many are due to a 
lack of drug treatment, however, because the board doesn't keep count of 
such factors. But it should.

Let's be clear: The parole board should be commended for demanding that 
convicts with a history of drug abuse first go through treatment before 
they are released early on parole. Turning loose felons with unresolved 
drug problems would be a greater threat to public safety than the costs to 
the state of warehousing them in prisons.

It's also clear that drug treatment is much cheaper and more effective than 
incarceration. Yet the wait for a place in one of the state's 57 treatment 
programs for prisoners can be up to six months.

Prison officials say that in most cases inmates on the waiting list get 
into the next session of a program. But the fact that there are 7,000 on 
the waiting lists and that paroles are being denied indicates a need for 
more treatment programs.

It's in the state's interest to provide treatment to all inmates who need 
it, whether they're eligible for parole or not.
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