Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jun 2009 Source: Metrowest Daily News (MA) Copyright: 2009 MetroWest Daily News Contact: http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/619 TELLING THE TRUTH ABOUT THE DRUG WAR Change begins with truth-telling, and a report released Thursday by the Massachusetts Bar Association puts the truth right out front. Its title: The Failure of the War on Drugs. The report, the product of more than a year's work by a task force of respected lawyers, law enforcement and mental health professionals, comes to a conclusion politicians have been reluctant to face: The state's drug laws and policies, like those of most other states, are wasteful, ineffective and cruel. Drug education programs fail to teach anything useful and show no signs of preventing drug abuse, the task force concludes. Addiction treatment programs are underfunded and out of reach of those who need them most. Incarceration isn't an effective deterrent to drug use or to recidivism. Most of those imprisoned for drug-related crimes receive no treatment and, thanks to mandatory minimum sentences, receive no post-release supervision. It's no surprise that so many of them find themselves behind bars again. Even those who hold no sympathy for anyone who abuses alcohol or drugs should care about public resources wasted on policies that don't work. Between 1980 and 2008, the state's prison population rose by 368 percent and the county jail population grew by 522 percent. But we've seen no decline in drug use or drug-related crime. Meanwhile, Massachusetts has made significant progress against one addiction - tobacco - without arresting a single adult. The truth is addiction is more effectively treated as a public health problem than a criminal justice one. Drug treatment, while far from perfect, is cheaper and more effective than prison. For the cost of housing a single, non-violent drug offender in prison for a year - about $48,000 - we could provide drug treatment for 10 non-violent substance abusers. The task force offers both short- and long-term recommendations: reform drug sentencing; refocus education and prevention efforts; expand treatment programs. But its most ambitious recommendations call for changing the way we think about drugs. Prevention and treatment policies must be based on science, not prohibitionist morality. We need to recognize history's lesson that drug abstinence is an unrealistic goal; that harm-reduction strategies make more sense. Truth-telling means recognizing what doesn't work, including, the report says, "programs that make us feel good about crusading against drugs - that wallow in public scorn against drugs but teach nothing new; that ignore human nature's natural tendency to engage irrationally in behaviors that are risky and adventuresome." As substance abuse strategies, "just say no" and "lock them up" were discredited years ago. They have persisted, in large part because politicians tend to choose popular platitudes over tough truths. But the tide may be turning. The new White House "drug czar" has decided to stop talking about the "war on drugs" because we are "not at war with people in this country." Gov. Deval Patrick has called for the reform of mandatory sentences and criminal records laws, issues his predecessors were too timid to touch. The MBA task force goes even further, both in its analysis and its recommendations. It estimates the state could save $25 million a year by implementing its reforms. Given the state's fiscal challenges, that ought to be reason enough for legislators to give these ideas the hearing they deserve. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr