Pubdate: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 Source: Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL) Copyright: 2007 News-Journal Corporation Contact: http://www.news-journalonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/700 Author: Deborah Circelli, Staff Writer Note: gives priority to local writers MILLIONS IN CUTS LOOM FOR TREATMENT CENTER DAYTONA BEACH -- Funding for innovative substance abuse treatment programs that help hundreds of local people a year may be lost in the future as the state budget tightens, local officials fear. As the governor signed budget cuts earlier this week to close a $1 billion state shortfall, local programs escaped unharmed. But next year they may not be as lucky. Local agencies are worried about a proposal to the governor in August by the state Department of Children & Families that could cut millions of dollars next year in state funding. The money came partly from aggressive lobbying by local agencies to help run programs, including one for pregnant mothers with substance abuse problems. Part of the DCF plan calls for eliminating $21 million in special projects, including about $9.4 million in child and adult substance abuse treatment. The plan said the cuts "may be necessary for 2008-2009." About 27 percent or $2.5 million of the statewide substance abuse cuts would come from Volusia and Flagler counties. The two-county area makes up about 3 percent of the state's population. Stewart-Marchman Center alone gets $1.6 million or 17.3 percent of the statewide money for those projects. If cut, officials said, it would mean half of the agency's state funding for adult treatment would be gone. Local treatment programs that could be affected include those that help pregnant mothers, adult detox treatment, residential services for people with both mental health and substance abuse problems and after-care housing. Many already have waiting lists and serve hundreds of people a year. "We have built up a better-than-average treatment system than (what) exists in the rest of the state through years of hard legislative work," said Chet Bell, CEO of Stewart-Marchman Center. "To see it cut in half overnight would just be catastrophic to our community." But DCF Secretary Bob Butterworth said despite the proposal he submitted, he personally "hopes it never gets to where they have to cut one dollar for substance abuse." He also thinks if more cuts come, new proposals may be submitted. "Everything I deal with in this agency, substance abuse is involved in, whether it be domestic violence or taking kids away from their parents," Butterworth said. "We would not want to see any substance abuse dollars lessened at all." He feels the same way about dollars for mental health services, he said. Other special projects in the proposal deal with everything from mental health to homelessness, but do not involve any local programs. Legislators earlier this month approved cuts to the budget because the slump in the housing market is slowing tax revenue. In the first cuts, DCF was able to reduce administrative costs instead of services. But legislators have said the budget problems will continue. Sen. Evelyn Lynn, R-Ormond Beach, said legislators probably won't meet again until the March session, but she added, "we will have much more severe cuts the next time around. The dollars are just not coming into the state." But she said she doesn't want to see the special projects cut because many locally have become "essential" and are models in the state such as a Stewart-Marchman program that helps pregnant mothers deliver drug-free babies. "That doesn't seem fair," Lynn said. "It's almost like getting punished for being innovative and creative with providing programs that are greatly needed." Susan Wesley, CEO for Community Outreach Services in DeLand, said the proposed cuts would eliminate 21 percent of her agency's budget. She fears without the programs clients will end up in jail getting no treatment. Randy Croy, executive director of Serenity House, said the cuts would also affect the court system, jails, emergency rooms and those who seek drug treatment. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek