Pubdate: Fri, 12 Dec 2008 Source: Michigan Citizen (Detroit, MI) Copyright: 2008 Michigan Citizen Contact: http://www.michigancitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3124 Author: Eric T. Campbell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) CITY ELIMINATES DRUG TREATMENT PROGRAM DETROIT -- Since 1970, residents seeking help with substance abuse have been able to rely on treatment and rehabilitation at the Herman Kiefer Health Clinic, including a methadone program. Employees at the City of Detroit Department of Human Services Drug Treatment Program say they've received notice that the division will close down in February. The closure will affect between 400 and 500 patients at the clinic -- releasing them into a community with few similar resources. According to Clinic Supervisor Kenneth D. Perry, staffers learned in November that they must stop servicing patients by Jan. 23. Department managers said budget cuts in the Community Services Block Grant forced the closure. Nearly 75 percents of the Drug Treatment division's budget is apportioned to staff salary. Perry moved to the Herman Kiefer health facility when fire destroyed the Gratiot Clinic on Nov. 6. Perry, who has worked in the city Human Services department for 16 years, told the Michigan Citizen that cuts affect almost 20 city employees at Herman Kiefer. Most of them will seek redeployment within Human Services, but that opportunity may not be there. "At least 10 of my employees are direct hires who will be out of a job," Perry says. According to Perry, the greatest impact will be on the population of 44,000 known opiate addicts in Detroit who need treatment. He says the cuts will mostly affect out-patient methadone treatment as some administrators move toward a residential approach. "There's just not enough methadone clinics in Detroit to serve them." The cuts don't favor substance abusers seeking a viable remedy, according to Perry. "There's no such thing as a one-stop-shop," he says. "You have to have options." Several staff members defended the Drug Treatment Program at a Dec. 9 City Council meeting, saying that the city division assists hundreds of city residents through methadone treatment, acupuncture, counseling, focus groups, and family therapy. Two of them, including substance abuse counselor Erma Jelks, said they'd successfully completed similar programs and had been drug-free for 15 years or more. "Often times, those individuals are your best examples that the program works," Perry suggested. Dr. Calvin Trent, General Manager for Special Populations Health Services, says that the notification of the methadone program's closure came from Human Services. He adds that the program may have been cut because it was more expensive to run than community-based programs, which contract health workers. Contracted workers are more cost-effective than unionized city employees. "The reality is that most of our providers are not unionized and have a lower cost structure," Dr. Trent told the Michigan Citizen. "I assume this had something to do with the decision." The City Council is not the body that initiated the department closure -- department closures are decided by the Mayor's office and the department head. When asked about the Drug Treatment Program, Mayor Cockrel's Spokesperson, Daniel Cherrin, would only say that the funding grant will not be renewed. The City of Detroit Human Services Department is entirely funded by the Community Services Block Grant (CSBG). It's the only city department in Michigan on a list of 30 eligible agencies to be fully subsidized by the CSBG. According to the Administration for Children and Families website, which operates under the U.S. department of Health and Human Services, CSGB allocations to the state of Michigan remained at approximately $24 million for the years 2006-2008. Perry says that funds available to the Detroit Human Services Department Drug Treatment Program have diminished over the last several years as emphasis has moved from treatment to prevention. The program's fund allotment is administered by the Michigan Bureau of Substance Abuse. The Michigan Citizen was unable to reach Human Services Director, Shenetta Coleman, by deadline. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin