Pubdate: Sun, 20 Aug 2006
Source: Charlotte Observer (NC)
Copyright: 2006 The Charlotte Observer
Contact:  http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78
Author: Marcie Young
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts)

BURKE TO GET DRUG COURT

Program, Which Starts In 07, Lets Adults Enter Treatment Rather Than Go To Jail

Beginning in January, some of Burke County's convicted drug offenders 
facing jail time will have an alternative to spending time behind bars.

Thanks to a $450,000 grant through the federal Bureau of Justice 
Assistance, Burke County adults found guilty of certain drug offenses 
could instead enter a treatment program to overcome drug and alcohol addiction.

Adult drug treatment courts offer chemically dependent men and women 
over 18 an alternative to jail time. Those eligible for the program 
must also be on probation for a convicted drug arrest, headed for 
jail or prison and show a desire to overcome addiction.

"These people have more than just a few weekends in jail, so that's 
why the motivation to do the program (is there)," said Catawba County 
Drug Court Director Reva Cook.

Drug court programs, which carry a 12-month minimum, requires clients 
to abide by strict rules, including regular drug testing, meetings 
with case officers, counseling and treatment.

"People think, well, all you do is sit and talk about drugs and 
alcohol, but that's not what it is," Cook said. "It deals with social 
skills. How do you go fishing and not drink?"

Each client's participation level, however, can differ greatly, based 
on an evaluation by a team of court and community professionals, Cook 
said. Some clients initially attend three meetings a day three times 
a week, while others attend less frequently.

"Everybody's addiction is different, and everyone's response is 
different," she said.

The Catawba County program started in May 2005 and, at 85 percent, 
has since seen the highest retention rate of any N.C. county.

Twenty-nine drug offenders have successfully gone through the program 
in Catawba County, and only four have been rearrested and returned to 
the regular court system, Cook said.

Convicted drug offenders must be county residents to be eligible and 
must not have a history of criminal violence, Cook said.

The program costs an estimated $4,200, which is funded by the federal 
government. Participants are, however, required to pay $10 a week, as 
mandated by the state. A year in jail, by comparison, costs the state 
$23,199, said George Dudley, spokesman for the N.C. Department of 
Correction. The county will provide office space.

Participants must also be enrolled as students or hold a job to be 
eligible. Getting work as a felon, however, isn't always easy, Cook 
said. Burke County Commissioners Chairman Wayne Abele said the 
success of Catawba's drug court program is a positive sign that Burke 
drug offenders will see similar progress.

"If we can help one (person), it makes a huge difference in our 
community," he said.

The Catawba County drug court, which has a presiding judge, bailiff, 
district attorney and defense lawyer, meets every other Friday, and 
the Burke program will likely have a similar schedule.

Catawba County is treating 26 clients, and Burke will have the 
capacity to enroll up to 25 participants, Cook said.

Each grant covers a three-year period, and if Burke County sees 
positive results in its new program, Cook said, she hopes to write 
another grant in 2009 that would expand the federal drug treatment 
court to Caldwell County.

Drug Court History

The nation's first drug court was established in 1989 in Dade County, 
Fla., by then-State's Attorney Janet Reno.

Now, nearly 1,000 adult drug courts are functioning in the United 
States and close to 250 additional programs, including Burke's, are 
in the planning stages, said Caroline Cooper, director of the Bureau 
of Justice Assistance Drug Court Clearinghouse at American University 
in Washington.
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