Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jan 2006 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2006 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Nate DeGraff, and Margaret Moffett Banks Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) LEADERS CONCERNED ABOUT DRUG REPORT Problems with a High Point drug-rehab program are frustrating community leaders and prompting renewed calls for a long-term drug-treatment center in Guilford County. A new report said Alcohol and Drug Services has too many empty beds and has strayed from its original mission of providing a 12-step treatment program. Only about half of ADS' 55 beds are occupied, and the program typically houses addicts for less than a week. "Why in the world when we have one of the finest facilities anywhere and it not being utilized -- I don't know," said Wally Harrelson, who helped found ADS and is the county's public defender. He also criticized ADS for not keeping addicts in its program for at least 28 days. "You certainly can't get anyone's attention in three to five days," he said. "That within itself is worthless." The report from consultant Jim Van Hecke was commissioned by the Guilford County Substance Abuse Coalition, a collection of citizens and members of 43 organizations associated with alcohol and drug treatment. It followed a News & Record series in November 2004 dealing with the county's 20-year battle with crack cocaine. ADS has performed substance-abuse services for the county's mental health agency for more than a decade, chipping away at a drug problem that costs the county tens of millions of dollars annually. But the program is underused and employs a "revolving-door" treatment strategy when addicts really need long-term care, said Bruce Davis, a Democratic county commissioner from High Point. "And if this requires more resources, then we need to put more resources to it," said Davis, who added, "I don't want us to turn our backs on ADS." But Chuck Fortune, ADS's executive director, said the county's mental health agency determines how long people stay in treatment, not ADS. In fact, he said it's rare when the state will reimburse ADS for letting an addict stay even seven to 10 days. "We have zero control over that," he said. "We're getting portrayed as the bad guy here." "It's not that we don't want to put people in treatment," he added. "The longer you keep someone in treatment, the better luck you will have keeping someone clean." Susan Mills, a coalition board member and the relative of a crack addict, said ADS must change its mind-set to better serve people who need long-term care. "I think it requires more than money," she said. "I think it requires changing your program." As of July 1, the mental health agency, known as the Guilford Center, had contracts with ADS worth about $1.7 million in federal, state and county funds. Commissioners approve all Guilford Center contracts awarded to ADS or any other agency. Commissioner Melvin "Skip" Alston said he hadn't heard specific complaints about ADS, which provides the lion's share of government-funded drug treatment in the county, but said the program - -- like most offered in Guilford County -- isn't effective because addicts are released too soon. "People can't get cured in a week or two," said Alston, a Democrat. "It's not effective at all, and that's the problem with Guilford County and the program we're offering." Commissioner Linda Shaw agrees. She and Alston, both veteran commissioners, have quarrelled often over the years, but both say long-term drug treatment is needed. "I don't think three days of detox or 12 days of detox is going to be the answer," said Shaw, a Republican. She added: "I'm not saying that ADS isn't needed, I'm just saying we need something beyond what they do." But Democrat Kirk Perkins said, "if we've got all those beds our there we're not utilizing, until we figure out why not, why would we consider additional drug treatment facilities?" The commissioners can change the county's drug treatment strategy if they want. Billie Martin Pierce, the Guilford Center's director, says she's urging commissioners to wait until the coalition's Jan. 19 presentation, when some of Van Hecke's findings will be included with the group's own report. "They need to let this report come forward," she said. "They don't have anything to react to right now." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin