Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 2004 Source: Natchez Democrat, The (MS) Copyright: 2004 Natchez Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.natchezdemocrat.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2205 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) PROGRAM CAN AID IN AREA'S WAR ON DRUGS Adams County's judicial system takes a valuable step today with the inaugural drug court, a program in its infancy designed to help misdemeanor drug offenders avoid jail time but still face their problems. Led by Judge Lillie Blackmon Sanders and staffed for now by volunteers, the drug court will move participants through a two-year program to help get them rehabilitated and working. Participants will have to meet regularly with a team that includes a treatment coordinator, a defense attorney, a prosecutor and a probation officer. Drug court organizers in Adams County -- which is one of only 12 counties with such a program -- got some good news earlier this month. Gov. Haley Barbour signed a law that will grant money, through a special assessment for fines on certain offenses, to drug courts throughout the state. We are glad to see the state paying attention to this valuable program, which has been successful in other counties and in the youth court here in Adams County. Local drug court officials don't know yet how much money they will receive from the assessments, but they are operating with $6,000 in funding from the Board of Supervisors and with the hope of new grants in the future. This program can have an impact on the war on drugs waged by law enforcement in Adams County and across the state. Participants in drug court will be the misdemeanor offenders who get caught in a web of addiction, not the major drug pushers who are feeding those addictions and feeding the drug war. We will be watching to see the impact the drug court can have over time, and wish organizers and participants well as they begin the process. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake