Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Pubdate: Tue, 6 Jul 1999 Copyright: 1999 Des Moines Register Contact: http://www.dmregister.com/ Author: Lee Rood, Des Moines Register Staff Writer Note: Information about Arizona's initiative to provide treatment for first & second-time drug offenders is available on the Arizona Supreme Court website at http://www.supreme.state.az.us/asd/dteftoday.pdf and http://www.supreme.state.az.us/media/dtef.htm THOUSANDS OF IOWA INMATES BATTLE THEIR ADDICTIONS ALONE Prison Population Outpaces Treatment Programs Waterloo, Ia. - Black Hawk County Sheriff Mike Kubik shares an opinion with many Iowans, but he expresses it a little more bluntly than most: "Don't talk to me about that treatment crap. It's the state's job to rehabilitate prisoners, and obviously it's not working because they just keep winding up back here. I say, give 'em 85 years and let them rot." Kubik need only point to the county's new 272-bed county jail - overflowing with familiar faces - to make his point. Among his prisoners, more than 80 percent have committed crimes fueled by drug or alcohol use. If drug treatment inside the state's prisons works, the longtime lawman does not see the results. Treatment experts in Iowa and elsewhere say the sheriff's remarks point to a problem with Iowa's approach to dealing with drug and alcohol offenders. Many inmates, they say, could benefit from long-term, intensive treatment - a proven but costly technique to reduce repeat crimes. The vast majority of Iowa inmates don't get that level of treatment. Instead, Iowans have paid ever-more handsomely to house this burgeoning group of mostly nonviolent offenders for longer and longer periods. The percentage of crimes fueled by substance abuse, meanwhile, has continued to escalate. "We know what we have been doing with sentencing isn't working," said Glenn Holt, head of the prison system's largest drug treatment program, in Clarinda. "If inmates haven't learned anything different, the expectation is, and should be, that they're going to reoffend." Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack and state lawmakers have said they would like to beef up treatment resources, which have not kept pace with drug offenders flooding the system. Others, like Kubik, say the amount of money needed to really affect crime is too prohibitive. Without treatment, though, experts agree widespread crime will remain a byproduct of widespread drug and alcohol use. Jeff Nielsen, a first-time inmate at Clarinda Correctional Facility who was tapped recently for a treatment program, said many chronic drug users do not have the tools to quit, even if they're motivated. "I've been wanting and willing for the last five years. . . . It's almost killed me," said Nielsen, a former Perry resident. Effects Under Study Fewer than one in 10 inmates attend a drug treatment program daily in Iowa's prisons. That ratio has little to do with prisoners' chances of benefiting from the programs and even less to do with demand, corrections officials say. National studies have underscored the benefits of treatment in reducing crime in the past decade, a period when more people have been arrested for drug use than any other in the nation's history. Rather, the scant supply of treatment is more a reflection of policy. In opting for more and harsher penalties for nonviolent offenders over the past 15 years, state leaders have widened the range of people in the system while forgoing an equally intense focus on treatment. Today, programs aimed at addiction in nine prisons across the state account for less than 1.5 percent of the prisons' operating budget. "It is basically a spit in the ocean," conceded Ken Burger, assistant director of offender programs for the department. Corrections officials have started to study the services they offer addicts and alcoholics. After years in which new drug offenders have outpaced the growth of programs, they say, they have failed to monitor just how beneficial the services are in reducing further crime. "That's an area we're really weak in," Burger said. "There really haven't been follow-up studies once inmates leave." Treatment officials hope state leaders will use the results of the studies to expand programs. Many feel the state cannot afford to do otherwise. Few Happy Stories Inmates serving time for drug crimes in Iowa prisons doubled to 1,315 in the five years leading up to 1998. Among more than 7,300 inmates statewide, 75 to 80 percent have some kind of problem with alcohol or other drugs. Without changes in sentencing or an intensive effort to slow the tide, state officials estimate that Iowa will need to build as many as six new prisons by 2008, at a cost of $175 million. Millions more will be needed to operate the prisons. Not all prisoners are candidates for drug treatment, but Burger estimates as many as half would benefit. "More and more of them are wanting it," he said. Most prison programs are outpatient and remain small and shorter than experts recommend. Holt said an estimated 2,500 of the state's 7,300 inmates need long-term residential treatment. The system has about 400 beds to serve them. Inmates and counselors say gaps in services also reduce the likelihood that treatment will have a lasting effect. Some prisoners are sent from intense programs back into the general prison population for months, even years, with little follow-up. New offenders, they say, are sometimes mixed with hard-core inmates and become worse. Some inmates are released before receiving treatment or held longer than needed until it becomes available, they say. Under any circumstances, prison counselors have tough customers. Prisons are filled with stories of bad breaks and unhappy endings. But at Anamosa State Penitentiary in eastern Iowa, Robert McBride has become a lucky man. A former Waterloo methamphetamine dealer, McBride was tapped recently for three months of drug treatment - a luxury thousands of Iowa prisoners each year do not get. Anamosa has just 24 slots for an intense outpatient treatment program and roughly 1,200 inmates. "There's guys I know who have been waiting to get in a year, a year and a half," said McBride. "I got in right away. I feel kind of bad about that." Given his motivation and his age, McBride believes he has a good chance of remaining drug-free when he is paroled. Although outcomes vary, studies suggest roughly 60 to 80 percent of inmates stay clean for at least a year after intensive treatment. Age is also a factor. At 31, McBride is slightly older than the 20-something majority of Iowa's inmates, who are generally considered impulsive and less receptive to treatment. However, treatment experts also say it's common for motivated inmates like McBride to slip back into using or dealing when released. Or, perhaps just as common, he may simply be another earnest-sounding "paper-chaser" - a big house term for convicts who go through the paces of programs simply to get their tickets out. Need Continues Outside Those factors may matter little with some inmates, counselors say. Coercive treatment - coupled with an emphasis on accountability and therapy that challenges criminal thinking - can be effective in reducing recidivism. With one hitch: "All the data have consistently suggested that success in treatment is directly proportional to the adequacy of after-care," said Dr. Richard Rawson, co-director of the Drug Abuse Research Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. "In many ways, treatment is probably a waste of time without it." When Iowa inmates are released, many are enrolled in the state's vast network of community-based programs for further counseling or group therapy, often a condition of parole. Those programs, too, have problems with crowding and heavy caseloads, officials say. Additional appropriations for those programs during the last legislative session make some corrections officials believe more relief may be on the way. "It is a little more hopeful," said Dot Faust, director for correctional services for the state's Fifth Judicial District. "I think if we show results, it will continue." For information about the effects of treatment on drug offenders: www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov For more information about Arizona's initiative to provide treatment for first- and second-time drug offenders: www.supreme.state.az.us (Look under the category "News and Media") - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder