Pubdate: Sat, 14 Jan 2012 Source: Press and Guide (Dearborn, MI) Copyright: 2012 Press and Guide Contact: http://www.pressandguide.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5196 Author: James David Dickson, for the Press and Guide PROPOSAL TO DRUG TEST MICHIGAN WELFARE RECIPIENTS IS FULL OF HOLES Legislation that would require drug testing of welfare recipients could soon hit the Michigan House's agenda, according to Rep. Jeff Farrington, R - Utica, who proposed the bill. Farrington proposed House Bill 5223 in December. That month the Michigan Department of Human Services released a legislatively-mandated report indicating that it would be feasible to drug test welfare recipients. Some type of pre-screen would be necessary, with testing for recipients suspected of drug use, and the matter of testing hadn't been worked out, but the department said it is feasible. What we don't know is the size of the problem this proposal would address. The figure we don't know, because the Department of Human Services either doesn't keep it or won't share it, is how many Michigan welfare recipients, as a percentage, report failing pre-employment drug screens. "Sometimes it's not about the size of the problem, it's about the perception," Farrington told Heritage Media. Farrington said that in his 50-50 district, drug testing for welfare recipients has "overwhelming" support. "My voters don't want to see their tax money being spent on drugs," Farrington said. House Bill 5223 would "require applicants for family independent program assistance benefits to submit to substance abuse testing before a final determination of eligibility," according to the legislation. Refusal to submit to the test would result in denial of benefits. The state has experimented with drug testing welfare applicants and recipients before. In 1999 the state ran a pilot program in 3 counties. "The pilot programs ran from October 1, 1999 until November 10, 1999," explains the DHS's feasibility report. "A total of 435 applicants were tested for the presence of marijuana, cocaine, opiates, amphetamines, and phencyclidine. Forty-five or 10.3% tested positive for drug use." 10 percent. For a measly 10 percent of welfare recipients the state is considering the creation of a multimillion dollar drug testing regime. Rep. David Rutledge, D - Ypsilanti, described the legislation as well-intentioned but not well-conceived. He anticipated constitutional problems if drug testing was a condition of eligibility. "What's the objective here?" Rutledge asked. "What are you trying to achieve?" Rep. Jeff Irwin, D - Ann Arbor, shared those concerns. Irwin said he'd rather see any money that would be spent on drug testing be used to eliminate fraud in the welfare system. Irwin and Rutledge both said Michigan should learn from Florida's example. Before a federal judge pulled the plug on Florida's drug testing regime, the state found that some 96 percent of those tested came up negative for illicit drugs. Only 2 percent of users tested positive. That case is working its way through the federal court system. There's also a question of how constitutional the test-em-all approach proposed in Farrington's bill would be. The ACLU of Michigan sued the Department of Human Services in federal court the last time the state rolled out a drug testing program. The group hasn't indicated whether it would do the same if a testing regime were reintroduced, but it does have concerns. ACLU of Michigan spokeswoman Rana Elmir, in an email to Heritage Media, wrote that "being poor is not a crime in Michigan...studies show that welfare applicants do not use or abuse drugs at a greater rate than the general population." Her email continued: "Many individuals receive money from the government through grants and special programs, including students and GM executives. However, we don't force them to go through the humiliating task of peeing in a cup for government assistance." Marchwinski v. Howard, as the case between the ACLU and the DHS was known, was settled in December 2003. Judge David Lawson laid out how a constitutionally-acceptable drug testing regime might work in Michigan. Applicants and recipients facing annual redetermination of their status would complete a substance abuse survey that the state would develop. When a person's responses indicate that drug-related barriers are standing in their way, the person would be matched with a substance abuse professional. Using an "empirically validated substance abuse screening tool," that substance abuse professional would screen for drug use. If drug use is suspected, a test would be issued. After the test, the substance abuse professional would determine the appropriate level of treatment and make a referral. The focus, in Lawson's system, was less punitive and more on the good of the person seeking help. But rather than follow Lawson's system, the state simply never followed through on a pilot program. The consent order between the ACLU and the state expired on Jan. 1, 2007. If House Bill 5223 passed it could mean the transfer of millions of dollars from hit-by-hard-times people and families who need it to drug-testing firms. As Farrington envisions the system working, the applicant would be forced to take a drug test upon applying. If he fails, he can't receive assistance. If he passes, $50 will be taken from his first assistance check to pay for the drug test. In fiscal year 2010, the family independence program took on 127,703 cases serving 352,419 Michigan residents, according to state figures. The program paid out some $413 million in cash assistance. In Washtenaw County, there were 2,218 cases serving 5,903 county residents. The program paid out some $5.9 million in cash assistance. Multiple 127,700 cases by $50 a test and a drug testing regime would've cost the state, or the state's most vulnerable residents, upwards of $6.35 million last year, if it had been the law. All to catch the 2 to 10 percent of the welfare recipients who use drugs. Add to that the costs of the litigation certain to follow any test-em-all regime. Heritage Media has filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the Department of Human Services to see how much the Marchwinski v. Howard litigation, which overturned the state's last drug-testing program, ended up costing Michigan taxpayers. We do know, though, that the state was required to pay $112,275 to the ACLU to defray attorneys' fees in Marchwinski v. Howard. How feasible is it? Under the feasibility study, the recipient pays for the test if it's positive and the state pays if it's negative. While Farrington's legislation would deny benefits to applicants and recipients who test positive, the feasibility study suggests denying benefits to positive testers until they complete a drug treatment program. (How someone applying for a few hundred a month in welfare bennies would afford such treatment is another question.) One wonders why mouth swab testing, by far the cheapest form of drug testing available, is never mentioned in the DHS's feasibility report. DHS won't say. Though a public body running on taxpayer money, DHS refused to answer even routine follow-up questions regarding the report it produced, and directed queries back to the legislature. Unlike urinalysis or hair follicle testing, mouth swabs trace recent, rather than historic, drug use. If private sector employers be our guide, there are employers in Michigan who use this method. If Farrington's bill were to become law, mouth swab testing would be best tailored to its stated purpose. For all the tough talk regarding what employers in the real world require, neither Farrington nor his colleagues in the legislature, nor their staffers - trustees of a $45 billion state budget - are required to submit to drug tests. Considering that this is the legislature which slashed $470 per pupil in K-12 spending, during a surplus, in a state that believes education is essential to its future, if there is any group which could benefit from drug testing, it is our representatives in Lansing. This proposal is costly and would shift taxpayer money from needy families to corporations, to say nothing of the constitutional concerns. Drug testing welfare users might help the people of Utica sleep better at night, but their fears shouldn't become our policy. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D