Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 2004 Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (NY) Copyright: 2004 Rochester Democrat and Chronicle Contact: http://www.democratandchronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/614 Author: David Smith Note: Smith graduated this month with a degree in elementary education from the State University College at Geneseo and is a substitute teacher in the Livonia and Dansville school districts. Cited: Gleason Center for State Policy report http://www.cgr.org/Articles/?idP Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?140 (Rockefeller Drug Laws) SEND DRUG ADDICTS TO TREATMENT - NOT PRISON On March 3, the Democrat and Chronicle reported on Mayor William Johnson's "ultimatum" to state leaders about the need for additional school funding. But where do we find more money to address the pressing needs facing so many school districts? Let's look at reforming state drug laws. With their long minimum sentences, the Rockefeller drug laws have been putting drug dealers and addicts behind bars since 1973. While the law's intent may be politically good, the Gleason Center for State Policy reveals alarming statistics that point to the fiscal and social shortcomings of the law. New York spends $2.3 billion annually on corrections, the fourth highest of any state, even as drug-related crime rates have been dropping since 1995. Between 1988 and 1998, New York increased spending on corrections by $761 million, while decreasing spending on the State University of New York by $615 million. The adverse effect of our government's preoccupation with punishment over education is taking its toll on the economy. There are about 18,300 drug offenders incarcerated in New York prisons, 93 percent of whom are black or Latino, at an annual cost of $30,500 each. A 1997 study by Rand's Drug Policy Research Center reveals that treatment is 15 times more effective than mandatory minimum sentencing at curbing more serious crime. If New York adopts this common-sense attitude, the savings could be better spent on programs such as Head Start, which focuses on families in needy school districts. Strict zero-tolerance drug policies also strengthen the stereotypes that many people, including teachers, have about inner-city attitudes toward education. Many blame this apparent apathy on poor family values, but this ignores the reality of the situation. According to statistics from The Sentencing Project, arrest rates of black men in the 24-29 age group quadrupled from 1986 to 1996. Children raised in these broken families suffer poor self-esteem and social stigmatization, and they often have problems developing healthy emotional connections to secondary caregivers. The tragedy of zero-tolerance drug policies has created a culture more adept at tearing apart families over trivial drug charges than treating the social causes behind the problem. These crimes are the result of addiction. If the answer is stringent drug laws, why are an estimated 1 million New Yorkers using drugs, and why are 500,000 of them addicts or abusers? Treatment and empathy, not punishment, is the answer. Millions of children are counting on it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake