Pubdate: Sun, 16 Aug 2015 Source: New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Copyright: 2015 The Santa Fe New Mexican Contact: http://www.santafenewmexican.com/SendLetter/ Website: http://www.santafenewmexican.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695 Author: Laurie Bauer Note: Laurie Bauer is a University of Southern California School of Social Work graduate student. She has lived and worked in Santa Fe for the past 12 years and is persuing a career in social work and public health. ALTERNATIVES OFFER DRUG OFFENDERS BETTER FUTURE The City Different is in a unique position, at just the right time in history, to have a small but powerful impact on how low-level drug offenders are treated, and, ultimately, on whether or not they are offered a chance at recovery. With increasing awareness of the social, economic and political effects of mass incarceration, it is more important than ever to begin thinking outside the box about the war on drugs. Some $60 billion is being spent annually to keep people incarcerated, and destructive mandatory-minimum sentences continue to flood our jails and prisons with individuals who are nonviolent drug offenders. The system of incarceration for drug offenses is doing more harm than good. Obtaining employment with a felony conviction is almost impossible, and securing student loans also is off the table. Families are broken up for years and decades at a time, and yet, people continue to use drugs. It is time to see drug use as a public health issue, not a criminal justice one. It seems that the tide is shifting. President Barack Obama has commuted 89 sentences for low-level drug offenders during his tenure; Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders is building a platform that calls for widespread and retroactive clemency to nonviolent drug offenders; bipartisan bills that improve drug-related sentencing and challenge mandatory-minimum laws have been introduced in the Senate; 23 states (plus Washington, D.C.) allow the use of medical marijuana. One future step is to focus on prevention by diverting drug offenders to treatment services rather than to the criminal justice system. Santa Fe is the second city in the United States to have implemented a Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD) program, and with that implementation, continues a long legacy of harm-reduction practices in New Mexico. What is LEAD? LEAD is a national intervention that allows certain low-level drug offenders - those possessing or selling less than 3 grams of opiates - an alternative to incarceration. LEAD has been implemented by the Santa Fe Police Department and since March 2014 has diverted 38 people to treatment services with capacity to serve 100. Why is this important to our community? First, it's well-known our community members are using drugs, being incarcerated for drugs, and losing opportunities to engage in civic responsibilities because of their involvement with criminal justice rather than with treatment systems. Second, a large percentage of people being arrested for theft in our town are addicted to opiates. Stealing funds their habit, and upon release the same behaviors occur, as jail does not adequately address underlying issues related to addiction. Lastly, Santa Fe, as a result of the police department's response to this lose-lose situation, is positioned to demonstrate efficacy of alternative-to-incarceration programs on a national level through LEAD participation. It's time for us to live up to our moniker and support our community by taking a stand against mass criminalizing of drug users. We can do this by supporting the Santa Fe Police Department's Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion program; we can contact our lawmakers and ask them to support the SAFE Justice Act of 2015, the Smarter Sentencing Act of 2015 and the Justice Safety Valve Act of 2015; we can assist those who are addicted by offering referrals to harm-reduction and/or treatment services; we can become informed about HIV, hepatitis C and sexually transmitted infection prevention, testing and treatment options; and, most importantly, we can treat all members of our community with consideration, concern and compassion as we respond to a failed war on drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom