Pubdate: Sun, 20 Apr 2008
Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL)
Copyright: 2008 Sun-Sentinel Company
Contact:  http://www.sun-sentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159
Author: Mark Fontaine
Note: Mark P. Fontaine is executive director of the Florida Alcohol 
and Drug Abuse Association.

DRUG TREATMENT A SENSIBLE APPROACH

As legislators wrestle with strategies to solve Florida's budget
crisis, it is prudent that the state's limited resources be spent
wisely. One of the smart investments the state has supported is
community-based drug treatment for offenders on the verge of prison
admission and drug treatment in prison for inmates on their way back
into the community.

According to the Department of Corrections, 65 percent of the 100,000
inmates in prison and 59.7 percent of the 153,000 offenders on
probation have a substance abuse problem and need treatment. The state
has contracted with community substance abuse providers for 14 years
with positive results, the data showing that prisoners who received
institutional treatment returned to prison at a lower rate than those
who didn't receive treatment. The success rate is even greater for
probationers who received community-based treatment outside of prison.

Drug treatment is not a soft-on-crime approach, but rather a
smart-on-crime approach. There is significant research showing that
offender drug treatment works, and is one of a variety of strategies
that have been used across the nation to flatten the intake of new
inmates. Data from the Florida Department of Corrections validates
that drug treatment is a cost-effective intervention for offenders as
it reduces prison admissions and recidivism.

Another smart approach is the cost-savings benefit of substance abuse
treatment. Already, this potential savings was compromised when, in
November, 309 community substance abuse offender beds and 525
institutional drug treatment slots were eliminated. For $9,400, a
probationer with a substance abuse problem was provided drug
treatment, random urinalysis, job placement and supervision. By
cutting the beds, the same offender who now goes to prison will cost
taxpayers $45,000.

These numbers demonstrate that substance abuse treatment, either
community-based or within an institution, is a smart, long-term
investment for the state of Florida.

Next year alone, the state of Florida has committed $715 million
dollars for the construction of new prisons and to open beds that are
already constructed. Within the next five years, it is anticipated
that there will be a 30 percent increase of new prisoners entering the
state corrections system. The cost to build the 17 new prisons needed
to house those inmates will total $1.7 billion. Considering the
enormous fiscal impact over the next five years, shouldn't we be
seeking cost-savings methods now?

In the next two weeks, legislators will decide whether to eliminate or
continue these treatment programs, which amounts to only 1.4 percent
of the total Department of Corrections budget. Lawmakers have the duty
to spend state resources wisely. As funds diminish, strategic business
thinking demands new and innovative approaches to investing.

Drug treatment for offenders is one approach to long-term savings in
the midst of a year in budget crisis. Not only will it save money, it
also has the additional benefit of saving lives.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake