Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 Source: News-Enterprise, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 News-Enterprise Contact: http://www.newsenterpriseonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1663 Author: Christopher Carpenter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) PENCE PUSHES TREATMENT FOR DRUG OFFENDERS Lt. Gov. Steve Pence addressed Hardin County residents at the Elizabethtown-Hardin County Chamber of Commerce luncheon in Elizabethtown Thursday. Pence said Kentucky is taking a new approach to combating illegal drug use. "We've got to get away from the mentality that we will incarcerate our way out of the drug problem," Pence said. Pence said not only that Kentucky could not afford to keep people behind bars, but also that treatment and rehabilitation provide a better solution to the problem. Pence said a summit drawing on expertise from across the state has been looking at the scope of the problem, the assets available to fight it, what has and has not worked in Kentucky and in other states, and at what the best way is to use the state's assets. Recommendations coming out of the summit were assembled Wednesday in Frankfort, and will be passed on to Gov. Ernie Fletcher. Important questions remain, Pence said, such as how to determine which drug offenders are recommended for treatment, where the money will come from and the best way to get someone into treatment. "These are going to be tough choices," Pence said. "Our answer is not going to be more of the same." Pence said the best approach was to attack the drug problem on the front end. One way to slow down the supply is to reduce the demand, he said. Parents, families and entire communities need to reach out to teenagers and let them know that drugs are not cool, Pence said. Pence said not even his own 16-year old son will be spared the pressure to try drugs. "Every kid will face that dilemma at some point in their life," he said. Pence said one way to get through to teenagers is to capitalize on the fear most teens have of getting caught when they try drugs or alcohol. Pence said drug testing for teens and using drug-sniffing dogs in schools would send strong messages to teens not to try drugs. Pence said drug problems cross county borders when law enforcement cracks down in a certain county. "It's like holding Jell-O," he said. "You squeeze it and it will ooze somewhere else." Hardin County Sheriff Charlie Williams, who participated in the drug summit, said education could be effective in helping teens stay away from drugs. The one thing officers cannot do is instill the values that keep teens off drugs in the first place, Williams said. Besides talking about Kentucky's efforts to eradicate drugs, Pence also spoke about his frustration with the Kentucky General Assembly's failure to pass a budget. Pence said Fletcher delivered plans for operating within budget constraints without raising taxes and for modernizing Kentucky's tax laws to make them more business friendly. Both plans were blocked, he said. Those people are standing in the way of Fletcher's ideas and derailing the will of the people, Pence said. "When the people in the state overwhelmingly elected Governor Fletcher, they put their stamp of approval on his ideas," Pence said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin