Pubdate: Thu, 29 Jun 2006 Source: Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) Copyright: 2006 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://www.commercialappeal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 Author: Robert Weiner, Virginia Wattiker Note: Robert Weiner was spokesman and director of public affairs for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy from 1995 to 2001. Virginia Wattiker is a drug policy analyst at Robert Weiner Associates. BUDGET CUTS IN DRUG PREVENTION PUSH CRIME UP This month the FBI reported the highest one-year increase in violent crime rates in 15 years -- back to the frightening situation which challenged the Clinton administration in its first year. Memphis' violent crime rate jumped 25 percent between 2004 and 2005, with the number of reported murders, rapes, robberies and aggravated assaults growing from 10,093 to 12,630. But the FBI's analysis of its crime figures and media reports neglected the clear connection between drugs and crime. The current administration's overall anti-drug budget has been slashed by over one-third from $19.2 billion in 2001 to $12.7 billion for 2007. This reduced budget for the federal government's comprehensive drug-fighting initiatives -- including education, prevention and treatment programs as well as enforcement efforts -- is a genuine threat to our national security. While the war in Iraq and homeland security issues have dominated the headlines, federal budget cuts have downsized anti-drug efforts in favor of increases in military funding to some $500 billion annually, including $41 billion this year for the new Homeland Security Department. In 1997 the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy launched the National Youth Anti-drug Campaign, a five-year, $1 billion multimedia advertising program that committed roughly $200 million a year to persuade America's youth not to use drugs and encourage parents to talk more with their children about drugs. With bipartisan support (House Speaker Newt Gingrich joined the Clinton team in announcing the initiative), ads were run seven times a week, hitting 94 percent of the program's target audience. Gingrich called the media campaign part of a "World War II-style, all-out plan for victory" against drug abuse. The numbers bear out the effectiveness of the campaign: Teen drug use fell 34 percent during the last three years of the Clinton administration (1997-2000). Apparently, the current head of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy has a less enthusiastic approach to maintaining the priority of the effort against drugs -- the administration has sliced the media campaign in half to $99 million annually. At the same time, the rate of decline in youth drug use has slowed to 19 percent in the three years from 2002 to 2005 -- far less than the reduction in Clinton's last three years. The violent crimes reported nationally last year included about 16,900 murders , a 4.8 percent increase over 2004 and the highest percentage increase in 15 years. This rise in crime can be at least partially attributed to these drastic cuts in our drug budget. Dr. Nora Volkow, the brilliant director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, reported just this past April, "A majority of current and former prisoners -- 60-80 percent -- in the nation's criminal justice system were convicted on drug related charges: possession, trafficking, crimes committed while under the influence of drugs, or committed to support an addiction." In addition, according to the U.S. Justice Department's "Drug Use and Crime" fact sheet, 68 percent of female arrestees and 67 percent of male arrestees tested positive in urine tests for illegal drugs -- cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamine, opiates or PCP -- compared to 6 percent drug use in the population as a whole. The link between drugs and crime is irrefutable. In 2001 the government devoted $19.2 billion to anti-drug spending. With annual decreases each year since then, that figure has been cut to $12.7 billion. The administration also has proposed cancellation of the "Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities" state grant program -- integral in education and prevention of drug use in our nation's school systems. Administration officials are asking to move oversight of the 30-city High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas program out of the White House (including the Appalachian HIDTA, which includes parts of Tennessee) and have proposed reducing its funds by over half (to $100 million from the $227 million approved by Congress). They also have pushed for near deletion of the science-based Counter Drug Technology program, which provides equipment to local law enforcement departments; they asked Congress to cut its funding from $30 million to $10 million last year. (Funding now stands at $20 million, down from $40 million in 2000.) With the war on terror using up our money, the fight against drugs has taken an unfortunate back seat. An estimated 19.1 million individuals in the United States have abused drugs during the past month, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. This is an extremely serious problem that contributes to an estimated 17,000 deaths a year, on top of the associated crime. Continuing to take money from counter-drug programs will be as deadly to our society as failing to fund prevention of a terrorist attack. Robert Weiner was spokesman and director of public affairs for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy from 1995 to 2001. Virginia Wattiker is a drug policy analyst at Robert Weiner Associates. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath