Pubdate: Fri, 11 Sep 1998 Source: The Herald (Glasgow) Contact: http://www.theherald.co.uk Author: James Freeman, Home Affairs Correspondent CHANGE IN FOCUS ON JAIL DRUGS Drug Tests Under Review THE CHIEF Inspector of Prisons in Scotland, Mr Clive Fairweather, no longer believes that drugs will overwhelm the jail system. He stated this yesterday while calling for a more focused anti-drugs policy in Scotland's jails. With the more coherent drugs strategy being developed by the Scottish Prison Service, he was hopeful that a lot could be done in the future to reduce the number of prisoners returning to the Community with drug habits which led to more crime. Launching his annual report, Mr Fairweather said he had "written a long essay on drugs" because they pervaded an awful lot of prison life, It was people turning to crime for drugs in the community which had pushed up the prisoner population and in turn, prison overcrowding. "Drugs are the root of many of the problems inside prison, like suicide, like violence, and if people come out with the same drug problem, we are in a vicious cycle - more drugs, more crime, a return to prison and more overcrowding," he said. Prison was, however, an opportunity for the whole community to do something about one of the greatest scourges of our time. Although he and his inspection teams had been told repeatedly by prisoners that many were turning away from cannabis use because it can be detected by mandatory drug testing for up to three weeks, and towards opiate use because heroin's half-life in the body is only three days, proof that this was really the ease continued to elude them. He is suggesting to the SPS that there may now, after a year, be a need to completely review and redirect mandatory drug testing to target only those who pose the greatest threat to secure custody and those in most need of the opportunity to change. There was merit in the argument that MDT was working most effectively against those with the least corrupting drug habit - cannabis use. Mr Fairweather also suggested more equitable punishments across all the prisons for drug abuse, incentive schemes, including possible in-cell TV for those remaining off drugs, more use of reception testing to assess the size of drug problems early and more targeting of resources at young offenders who were most likely to reoffend. He praised the efforts of the SPS over a broad front, adding: "Looking to the future, we believe that a mixture of MDT, education, addiction programmes and incentives, together with the power of family influence, could help turn the tide of drug misuse which previously had been threatening to engulf the penal system." Secretary of State for Scotland, Mr Donald Dewar, said he shared Mr Fairweather's belief and welcomed the fact that l7 out of the 22 penal establishments in Scotland now offered drug-free areas to suitable prisoners and that by spring about a quarter of the available capacity would be drug-free. Meantime, a report from the Commons select committee on home affairs criticised soaring prison rates in England and Wales, warning that locking up more and more people was unsustainable, expensive and ultimately ineffective in the long-term goal of protecting the public. They called for more effective use of community sentences, including electronic tagging and home detention curfews, but criticised the lax way some community sentences were enforced and the lack of research into which ones were successful in keeping criminals away from more crime. Paul Cavadino of NACRO said the report was a sea change away from the 'prison works' philosophy. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry