Pubdate: Mon, 19 Dec 2005 Source: Times, The (Munster IN) Copyright: 2005 The Munster Times Contact: http://www.nwitimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/832 Author: Patrick Guinane Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) STATE PINS HOPES ON PRISON METH PROGRAM Visiting Governors See New Strategy At Work KOKOMO - The guards dress in dark slacks and burgundy polo shirts, and the inmates talk of redemption. Their stories of crime and drug abuse vary slightly, but each says it was meth that led them here, to the Miami Correctional Facility outside of Kokomo in Miami County. "I've been in and out of prison my entire life. They were always short stays, a couple of years, until 12 years ago I met the devil: meth," said David Young, an inmate at the medium security facility. "I'm in this prison on an attempted murder charge. I shot someone because he didn't have my money, so I could get my meth." But Young says a new meth treatment program the state established last spring has given him hope. He called his family last month to let them know he wouldn't be coming home when he's released. At home, he says, it would be too easy to return to old habits. In 2006, Indiana will release about 15,000 inmates, including many with stories just like Young's. The problem is, about 5,500 of them will be back behind bars within three years. "We have to do a better job of quality control," said J. David Donahue, commissioner of the Indiana Department of Correction. Donahue says he wouldn't want to work for a washing machine factory where four of every 10 appliances are returned defective. And Donahue says he told his boss, Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels, he doesn't want to run a prison system that maintains the current recidivism rate of 37.7 percent. Treating drug abuse, especially methamphetamine addiction, could be the key. "Whether it's a dope slinger, whether it's the manufacturing arm of the business -- a meth cook -- or whether it's the consumer of the product, 80 percent of our inmates, right now, are here because of abuse," Donahue told officials from 13 states who visited the Miami Correctional Facility as part of last week's regional meth summit. A group of about three dozen officials made the 60-mile bus trip north from Indianapolis. They got a look at the state's first treatment center solely dedicated to meth, a fiercely addictive, often homemade drug that has ravaged rural communities much the same way crack cocaine attacked the urban landscape of the 1980s. Dubbed, CLIFF, or Clean Living is Freedom Forever, the 200-bed Miami unit is one of two treatment centers for male inmates Indiana has established since April. A 100-bed female treatment center began operating in November at the Rockville Correctional Facility. The state plans to set up a similar program for juvenile offenders. Inmates who are within three years of parole can participate in CLIFF. The program takes six to nine months to complete, and enrollees can shave six months off their prison sentence. The inmates spend several hours a day in group sessions, talking about how their addictions have affected their own lives as well as those of family and friends. They also set up support systems that will assist them upon release. That includes locating Crystal Meth Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous support groups they can attend. Young was one of four CLIFF inmates who spoke to the group of visiting Midwest officials. The tour concluded with a reception and series of presentations held in a prison gymnasium turned banquet hall. A catered spread of pastries, shrimp cocktail, beef brisket and other appetizers awaited card tables fashioned with white tablecloths and linen napkins. A spokeswoman for the Department of Correction said the reception cost $843 and was paid for out of the Miami Correctional Facility's budget. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin