Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 1999 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ ARIZONA SHOWS THE WAY ON DRUGS Arizona voters, tired of paying the exorbitant costs of imprisoning drug users and addicts who might be helped more cheaply, voted twice to provide a treatment alternative to jail. Now an Arizona Supreme Court study of the first year of probation with mandatory drug treatment -- instead of prison -- has shown the apparent wisdom of that decision. Congress and the legislatures of New York and other states should take heed. For a decade and a half, since crack cocaine and its murderous dealer wars frightened the electorate in the mid-80's, the knee-jerk political reaction has been to pass tougher criminal drug laws, build more prisons and put more drug users and dealers in them. Many states now spend more on prisons than on higher education. More than 1.8 million people nationwide are in prison, 400,000 of whom are addicts or chronic users. But punishment has not solved the problem. Addicts, untreated, emerge from prison and quickly return to drugs, resorting to robbery or even murder to get the money for them. The approach approved by voters in Arizona diverted people who are convicted of or plead guilty to nonviolent drug-related crimes from jail to probation and treatment. The treatment and supervision are largely paid for by a tax on a legal drug -- alcohol. It is the kind of program that an increasing number of law enforcement chiefs, including Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, the head of the national drug policy office for the Clinton Administration, have been advocating. The results of the new policy's first year of operation in Arizona suggest that it is a success. The cost of prison, the State Supreme Court said, is $50 a day. The cost of treatment, counseling and probation is $16 a day. The amount saved, it estimated, is more than $2.5 million the first year, and more than three-quarters of the people monitored on probation have stayed free of drugs. Arizona is a politically conservative state. Its voters showed that they were tired of paying the costs of a bad idea. In requiring that drug offenders be treated before being freed of supervision, they may have made themselves safer. By treating drugs as a health problem, they have shown states like New York, which spends $700 million a year to imprison drug felons, a better way. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck