Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2007 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 Author: Carl Mumpower A CONVERGENCE OF SOCIAL ILLS TEARS AT OUR SOCIETY'S FABRIC A convergence of social ills tears at our society's fabric It took the twin towers of New York to expose the insidious realities of Islamic fascism. It was the fragile dikes defeated by Hurricane Katrina that betrayed the dysfunction of three tiers of government, the Corps of Engineers and FEMA. A falling bridge in Minnesota was the tragic wake-up call to a long-neglected national infrastructure. In each of these examples we find evidence of patterned malaise, distraction and self-interest by our leaders. In each we find the opportunity to point a finger or look deeper into the mirror. Mental health woes In Asheville, as across the state, we have our own triangle of despair anchored in three disasters converging on tomorrow. Illumination can begin with the AC-T Aug. 19 editorial on our failed state mental health system. Scapegoating one bureaucrat for recent misjudgment does not conceal a mental health system that was undermined by many hands over many years. It began in the 1960s with an unsustainable government promise establishing a statewide system available to all. It evolved into a complex nightmare in the 1980s, when that same government's controls and inefficiencies generated costs of service double that of private providers. It ended with the abandonment of earlier promises and a bungled transition to a state-funded hybrid system morphing a safety net into a mineshaft. Not one of the host of players -- elected or appointed -- who were complacent or complicit in the demise, is being held accountable. The consequences, as usual, are reserved for the victims. Growing drug culture Disaster two can be found in our growing drug culture. In a society that is losing its moral compass, vision and ability to separate what feels good from what is good, drugs, both legal and illegal, have become a parachute from misery. We allow open-air drug markets and drug dens in our public housing developments and other vulnerable neighborhoods to operate as recruiting stations for a procession of new users, dealers and lost children. Ignoring the fact that no one ever got to a better place through the abuse of drugs, society as a whole looks the other way and hopes it is not their home, car, business or family that is the next one hurt by an addict who can't find help in our mental health system but who can easily dodge a broken court system. Criminal justice burden North Carolina is 48th in the nation for state funding of its criminal justice system. By the time this overburdened structure holds the average drug dealer or social predator accountable, their career path has been cemented several steps beyond probable redemption. Impaired with antiquated technology and absurd manpower constraints, what can be more aptly called a system of misjustice plea bargains 98 percent of its cases and places our police at risk with the fact that a crack dealer must be caught and convicted three or more times to get any meaningful jail time. Pumpkins are tendered more creative energies at Halloween than a state government loath to create a 21st century system of timely justice and meaningful sentencing alternatives necessary to ensure that crime does not pay. Anyone who takes the time to look deeper at our issues of homelessness, the harsh realities of public housing, the horrific dropout rate of our black students, child and spouse abuse, prostitution and a host of other social ills, will find this triangle of despair working in the background. While we chase symptoms, abandon our historical success equation of liberty, opportunity and responsibility, and increase our investment in entitlement programs, the noose of reality squeezes ever tighter. Thomas Edison once shared that, "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work." The folks in Raleigh wear suits, and while they pretend and we ignore, the heart is leaking out of our society. It remains to be seen if we have the courage to take hold of this triangle of despair with the urgency necessary or if it will continue to successfully seize our future. Carl Mumpower is a military veteran who currently serves on the Asheville City Council. He lives in Asheville. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom