Pubdate: Sat, 29 Nov 2008 Source: Leader-Telegram (Eau Claire, WI) Copyright: 2008 Eau Claire Press Contact: http://www.cvol.net/contacteditor.htm#editorform Website: http://www.leadertelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/236 Author: Mark Ruddy and Roberta Wegner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) FOR ADDICTS, TREATMENT TRUMPS JAIL It is clear Wisconsin must be tougher on drunken driving and on the dysfunctional way alcohol saturates our culture. All of our families have been wrenched directly or indirectly by these problems. But rather than demanding prison time to appear tough, we need to be smart on crime: Give judges a well-equipped toolbox to set up an array of disciplines and supports that can result in real change by offenders. Drunken driving and other forms of alcohol and drug abuse are only symptoms. Addiction is the cause. The only humane and effective solution is to treat this disease. On a national level, it is a scandal that jails and prisons have become dumping grounds for the addicted, homeless, mentally ill, racial minority males and the poor. Alcohol or drug addiction and/or mental illness are the underlying causes of 80 percent of these imprisonments. It costs $30,000 a year to imprison just one person. For a third of that we could save the lives of the addicts and the their potential victims by providing quality substance abuse treatment, case management, probation supervision and supportive services. These are best offered in community-based programs, rather than separating the addicts from real life; offenders stay on the job, in families and in the community paying taxes. A strict treatment program is often harder than a jail term and/or fine. The treatment toolbox could include halfway houses, extended treatment, education/job/housing help, mentors, an array of gadgets such as electronic bracelets that measure alcohol ingestion and other proven aids. In comparison, our current sanctions for drunken driving and other addictive behaviors could be described as "treatment lite" and result in 75 percent re-offending. Luckily, we have model programs to learn from, such as the alcohol-related SSTOP in Winnebago County and Waukesha County's Alcohol Treatment Court. These successful models deal aggressively and effectively with drunken driving without automatic jail time. They have these things in common: - -They intervene early, after the second or third offense. (Programs could be set up to have serious engagement with treatment programs even for the first offense.) - - They demand accountability. Programs last for at least a year; participants get treatment and are tested regularly. - -There are graduated sanctions and graduated rewards. Minor rule-breaking will set them back; increased misbehavior results in more serious consequences. - -They don't use jail or prison except as a last resort. (Jails can then be saved for those we need to hold separately, such as perpetrators of violent crimes.) These programs embody many of the same principles of Eau Claire County's successful Drug Court. A significant funding source for such innovations could be the Community Justice Act proposed by state Reps. Mark Pocan and Scott Suder. It would significantly increase Treatment Alternatives and Diversions funds, which go to counties that start effective programs to treat offenders in community-based settings. To learn more about this proposal, go to www.wisdomwi.org and click on "Treatment Instead of Prison." Our current approach to dealing with addiction and drunken driving is neither effective nor financially viable. It is opportune that Eau Claire County has special committees and councils studying how to better hold offenders accountable while maximizing their rehabilitation. As citizens, we need to be held responsible for the creation of effective, systematic and coordinated rehabilitation options so we all can get on with our lives. ======================= The authors, both of Eau Claire, are co-chairs of the Treatment Instead of Prison task force of JONAH, a Chippewa Valley interfaith group that educates, advocates and acts for social change. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath