Pubdate: Thu, 15 Oct 1998 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Copyright: 1998 The Hartford Courant Contact: http://www.courant.com/ Author: Tom Condon TREAT MORE PRISONERS FOR DRUGS I recently described an experimental program that will allow doctors to administer methadone to stabilized heroin addicts. Lou Sorrentino, a drug counselor in New Britain, said the law that created the program also allows the state Department of Correction to begin methadone treatment for inmates. But he said the department doesn't do so (except to help detox pregnant female inmates), and he thinks it should. Dr. Brett Rayford, the department's medical director, said the DOC studied the question last year, and concluded that it would be a security risk. ``Why introduce heroin in an environment where addicts can't get opiates? We use a drug-free model,'' he said. However it's done, there needs to be more drug treatment in prisons. Here and across the country, about 80 percent of inmates need substance abuse treatment, but only 12 percent receive it. Treatment is humane and cost-effective. If it works, addicts won't have to steal for drug money and won't be sent back to jail. In a column about the state police, I questioned whether the department needed 200 more troopers, saying they make a small percentage of the state's criminal arrests. Public safety Commissioner Henry Lee responded that his department performs crime scene analysis and other services in many cases where the local department makes the arrest. Fair point. I said the push for more troopers was driven by sprawl, by people moving to rural areas. Scott R. Schuett, a volunteer firefighter in Lebanon, says it's the people moving from the big cities who are demanding more services. ``They say, `We had this in Hartford.' . . . `Fine,' we tell them. `Move back to Hartford . . . or wherever you came from. We do not have the financial resources to provide the services you looked forward to in larger cities.' '' Schuett is right. Government cannot efficiently deliver services in large areas with low population density. We can't put a cop on every corner in Lebanon. People who want garbage pickup, tennis, French classes, etc., ought to move to cities. A legal defense fund has been started for former Hartford Public High School football star DeShawn Jennings, who faces carjacking charges later this month. ``It would be a crime to put that kid in jail and a waste of the taxpayers' money. He's turned his life around,'' said Ed Gaffney, executive director of The Work Bank Inc., a nonprofit work agency where Jennings has worked for the past year. People interested can make a check out to The Work Bank, 192 Wawarme Ave., Hartford, CT 06114. I reported that the Connecticut Institute for the Blind/Oak Hill signed a contract more than two years ago to buy a house on the corner of my street. The institute still hasn't bought it, because the government program from which it's getting the money, Section 811, is so complex. New Jersey Congressman Rodney P. Frelinghuysen agrees. He sent me a transcript of this year's HUD budget hearings, in which he blistered HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo over the failure to disburse money for housing for the disabled. Frelinghuysen said only $2.5 million of an available $90 million had been disbursed "because the process is so damn complicated." "Hartford's Sec. 811 problems are far from unique," the congressman said. He sent my column to Cuomo, but the house on my street remains empty. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry