Pubdate: Thu, 12 May 2005 Source: Beaufort Gazette, The (SC) Copyright: 2005 The Beaufort Gazette Contact: http://www.beaufortgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1806 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG COURT'S PROOF IN PUDDING Full Government Funding Needed To Help Change Lives Beaufort County's Drug Court -- like others across the state and nation -- is working well and deserves continued full funding. The court is delivering solutions to one of society's most vexing problems: drug and alcohol abuse. It tackles the root of the problem rather than pretend it can be solved by arresting suspects time after time and throwing them in jail. The Drug Court can keep defendants out of jail, but it's not an easy way out. It has been called "Alcoholics Anonymous with teeth" because it can be both touchy-feely and threatening. The program offers intensive addiction treatment to nonviolent offenders rather than hard time. The 12- to 18-month program is costly to defendants, with a personal price tag of $1,500. They must keep a job, and commit a great deal of time and effort to changing their own lives. It involves random drug testing over a long period of time. And if participants mess up, they are dismissed and go straight to conventional sentencing with a guilty plea already on record. But even if drug treatment may seem mushy, the results are clear. Of the 66 offenders admitted to the program since it began in this county in late 2001, only one program graduate has been re-arrested. Fifteen were terminated during the program, 23 graduated and 28 are enrolled. Those who succeed end up with more than a clean criminal record. More importantly, they have a new beginning in life. They have new connections. They have new tools and new confidence to battle the addiction that reaches its harmful tentacles into the lives of so many crime victims, acquaintances and loved ones. The traditional criminal justice system does not disappear. The Drug Court enriches the system by offering a different approach at the same goal: rehabilitation. Jail time is supposed to change lives for the better, but too often the opposite happens. Statistics nationwide indicate that the Drug Court concept is reducing the repeat arrests that clog the judicial system and ruin lives. Manning Smith, the judge of the Beaufort County Drug Court, has gone above and beyond the call of duty to help the program succeed. He says he has daily contact from someone in the program. "It's the personal connection that makes the difference," he said. He wants to expand the program to handle more defendants. He wants to make it a nonprofit so it can accept private donations. But it needs full financial support from Beaufort County, the Town of Hilton Head Island and the city of Beaufort. Beaufort sent fair warning that it could no longer support the program after the current fiscal year. It should reconsider and think of the many ways its $30,000 allocation is actually an investment in lives and in the reduction of other government expenses. The positive results from the local court deserve full government support. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin