Pubdate: Sat, 01 Nov 2008 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2008 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Patty Gomez Note: Patty Gomez lives in Redding. END CYCLE OF ADDICTION, INCARCERATION In their recent "Speak Your Piece" against Proposition 5, Shasta County District Attorney Jerry Benito and Sheriff Tom Bosenko suggested that the proposition would allow people who sell drugs to avoid consequences. As a former program director for a chemical dependency treatment facility that provided treatment under PC 1000, Proposition 36 and the Drug Court programs, I have direct experience with these programs. While I honor the work that the writers do in their capacity as law enforcement and district attorney, I must vehemently disagree with them. The chemical dependency counselors who provide the services for these court-ordered treatment programs are trained to identify the difference between substance dependence and criminal behavior. Substance abuse and dependence are public health issues. That is why they are listed in the DSM IV as mental health disorders. They are disorders that require intervention and treatment. Selling drugs is a criminal behavior and quite separate from the physical condition of addiction. What can confuse the issue is that often addicts sell drugs to support their habit. However, when an addict gets clean, he or she usually stops selling drugs. On rare occasions the person gets clean and continues to sell drugs, but this is rather unusual. In my former work, the counseling staff and I were very tough on these folks. We immediately notified their probation officer and the client was charged with criminal behavior and incarcerated for a very long time. One of the mottoes of the 12-step program Narcotics Anonymous is "I am responsible." What that means is that the drug-dependent person is responsible to adhere to his or her recovery plan or face the consequences. It does not mean that the addict is responsible for being an addict, because it is understood that addiction has genetic and environmental components like other disorders. But ask any recovering person in a 12-step program, or any chemical dependency counselor, and they will be the first to say that addicts must face the consequences of their behavior. However, being an addict and possessing drugs requires treatment, not incarceration. A dear friend of mine teaches at Folsom Prison. He laments that so many of the inmates are incarcerated for drug addiction and drug possession and it is in prison that they learn to become real criminals. Recovery programs provide positive effects for the individual, the family and the community. Recovery has a ripple effect. Since service is an integral part of the recovery movement, people who get clean and sober often reach out and help others. I have seen whole families get clean and sober because one family member started the process. Incarceration often has the opposite effect. Since jails and prisons are often places of violence, sexual abuse, dishonesty and racism, the inmate is negatively impacted. They are often released to their community with new-found criminal "skills," physical illnesses like hepatitis C and staph infections, and mental health disorders like depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. And because they have been convicted of drug crimes, they often have difficulty obtaining employment. So they return to crime. And the cycle continues. Let's stop the cycle of addiction and incarceration. Vote yes on Proposition 5. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom