Pubdate: Sun, 27 Jan 2008 Source: Press-Republican (NY) Copyright: 2008 Plattsburgh Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pressrepublican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/639 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) IF THE PROGRAM WORKS, FUND IT If local district attorneys have their way, and if lobbying works and the State Legislature provides money through the New York State Office of Court Administration, county drug courts may be able to do their jobs more efficiently and perhaps even expand some of the good things they're doing. So says Saratoga District Attorney Jim Murphy, president of the group of district attorneys from New York's 62 counties. Franklin County DA Derek Champagne is an officer in the organization. Murphy presided over the association's annual meeting last week in New York City, where this year's issues and goals were clarified. At the top of that list is the need to expand drug-treatment courts and get state funding for prosecutors who work in those courts. Clinton, Franklin and Essex counties are successfully conducting misdemeanor drug courts as we write, where non-violent defendants addicted to drugs, alcohol and illegal substances have been successfully diverted from incarceration into treatment centers upon completion of the alternative criminal proceedings. Programs like these have contributed to the closure of four of New York state's largest prisons. The rub is that drug courts get no money from the state and little from the federal government. Drug courts operate in numerous counties, including the three in the North Country, even though they're not reimbursed by the state. Murphy and the DA's group hope to change that. The key will be to push for a legislative initiative. It's tough to argue against a plan that allows first-time misdemeanor offenders an alternative to state prison time. We look at it as an investment. And here's why. Oftentimes, the offender has a job, a family and financial obligations. If he or she goes to jail, who's going to pick up the slack? Public assistance might be required to assist a spouse and/or children whose exclusive wants and needs might be provided by the breadwinner who goes to jail. And how many employers are going to hold a job for an employee who goes to jail for a criminal offense? Not many, we'd bet. And drug courts are accountable by tracking statistics of their successes or failures. Take Murphy's jurisdiction, for example. In his county, state statistics show that not one graduate of the drug court in Saratoga has relapsed. And recidivism rates are extremely low, he says. And of the more than 245 people who have gone through his program, 49 have graduated, 11 of them from Road to Recovery court. These were people who were bound for prison. Those accepted six months of residential rehabilitation and then 12 to 18 months of drug-treatment court with weekly attendance mandatory and random urine testing. It's high time the state fund these judicial alternatives because, simply, it's the right thing to do. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake