Pubdate: Mon, 25 Jun 2007 Source: Daily Reflector (Greenville, NC) Copyright: 2007 Daily Reflector Contact: http://www.reflector.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1456 Author: Erin Rickert Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG PROGRAM EARNS FUNDING A court program designed to divert drug-addicted offenders in Pitt County from jail to the straight life through intensive treatment should begin running on state dollars once the 2008 fiscal budget passes, court officials said. Gregg Stahl, deputy director of the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts, said roughly $60,000 could be in the hands of local Drug Treatment Court officials by August. A court program designed to divert drug-addicted offenders in Pitt County from jail to the straight life through intensive treatment should begin running on state dollars once the 2008 fiscal budget passes, court officials said. Gregg Stahl, deputy director of the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts, said roughly $60,000 could be in the hands of local Drug Treatment Court officials by August. Stahl said the figure accounts for coordinator salary, benefits and operating costs. For nearly two years, the program has run on about $50,000 in federal grant monies secured through the Pitt County Sheriff's Office, said Melissa Larson, grant writer for the office. Since its start, the program has mirrored criteria laid out by the AOC for state-funded drug courts. The close attention to detail and the high probability of success noted by AOC staff during a recent visit qualified Pitt for the funding, Stahl said. "From all we can tell, they have gotten off to a good start," Stahl said of Pitt's drug-court program. "It should be an easy transition." Pitt joins four other drug courts in North Carolina set to receive funding when the state budget is passed. The funding -- which would have typically been available July 1 -- has been delayed due to continuing budget discussions, Stahl said. As a result, Larson applied for and received a three-month extension to the federal grant from the Governor's Crime Commission that will allow the program to continue through September if the budget has not yet been passed. Money not used will be returned to the crime commission, she said. Once funds go through, the Pitt court will be among about 30 like it in North Carolina to be funded by the state after meeting AOC guidelines, Stahl said. Participants to the drug court program are nonviolent drug-addicted offenders typically referred to the program by court officials or law enforcement officers. Most suffer from addictions to cocaine, marijuana and heroin. During the program, which takes a year or more to complete, participants submit to regular counseling meetings, random drug tests and biweekly court sessions, making the program more challenging than regular probation. The sheriff's office has collaborated with the Public Defender's Office, the Department of Community Corrections, the Pitt County District Attorney's Office and PORT Human Services to serve offenders. Carl Cogdell, DTC coordinator, said the court has seen three graduates since its start. A fourth is due to graduate in late August. Of these graduates, Cogdell said, one has relapsed. The slip-up has caused the group to begin discussion of an after-care program through Treatment and Accountability for Safer Communities, or TASC, that would call for graduates to meet one day a month for continued support in staying clean, he said. With a July implementation planned, Cogdell said he, probation officer Bill Woolard and Dawn Ellis, lead TASC manager -- who aid in the program already -- would volunteer to lead the sessions, rotating duties monthly. "You want to build a rapport and friendship with these people," he said. "When you start seeing people making those changes in life ... that's the most rewarding thing you can ever do." "You want to keep that going," he added. Currently, about 16 offenders are being aided during the biweekly Friday court sessions, he said. State funding will nearly double the numbers typically seen in the court, Cogdell said, bringing attendance closer to 30. It also will take Cogdell's post from a part-time county position to a full-time state job. Though little other change will come with the funding, Cogdell is confident the progress will give the program a more stable footing. "It gives the program more respect," Cogdell said, "knowing it's there, it's within the budget, it's part of the court system, and it's not hanging out there. It gives the peace of mind (that) we are going to be here for a long time." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom