Pubdate: Thu, 21 Oct 1999 Source: Alameda Times-Star (CA) Copyright: 1999 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: 66 Jack London Sq. Oakland, CA 94607 Website: http://www.newschoice.com/newspapers/alameda/times/ Author: Matthew B. Stannard, Staff Writer CRACK PROGRAM STIRS UP RESIDENTS Aims At Drug Addicts, Pays For Birth Control Delayed but undaunted, a Southern California woman promised Wednesday to return to the East Bay with her offer to pay $200 to drug addicts who agree to use long-term birth control. But the local activists who greeted Barbara Harris to Oakland by tearing down a billboard that advertised her offer say they will be ready for her again. Harris, an Orange County resident, formed Children Requiring a Caring Kommunity, or CRACK, two years ago after adopting four children from the same drug-addicted mother and failing to get legislation passed to classify drug use during pregnancy as a form of child abuse. CRACK pays addicts $200 to complete a long-term birth control procedure: Norplant, tubal ligation, an intrauterine device, vasectomy, or one year of Depo-Provera. So far, 85 women have accepted the deal, Harris said. The program is supported by private donations that last year totalled almost $90,000, according to papers filed with the California Attorney General's office. The $1,800 billboard campaign in the Bay Area was funded by San Francisco money manager John Novick. Billboards advertising the offer and Harris's toll-free number have gone up in Southern California, Fresno, Sacramento, Las Vegas, Tucson and Phoenix, but Harris said the reception in Oakland was the most hostile so far. Nevertheless, she promised to place three more billboards in Oakland and Richmond during the next six months, or longer. "As a matter of fact, we will advertise in Oakland big-time now, because nobody is going to tell me that I don't have a right to advertise," Harris said. "It's amazing that they think these women have a right to give birth to 8 or 12 or 14 drug-addicted babies, but I don't have a right to hang a billboard." Harris' critics, including Planned Parenthood, Alameda County's public health officials, and leaders of several local drug treatment programs, say the CRACK project is an absurdly simple approach to an overwhelmingly complex problem, a blunt club that they say unfairly targets poor and minority women and will hurt the people it purports to protect. "Everyone knows that $200 is not going to help one person get into a recovery program," said Ethel Long Scott, head of the Women's Economic Agenda Project in Oakland, who organized Tuesday's protest against the CRACK program, which she said smacks of eugenics and racism. "About the only thing $200 is going to do is help them get some more dope." Long Scott and other treatment advocates, like Johnnie Lewis of West Oakland's SISTER, said Harris's donors' could better spend their money expanding programs designed to help addicts get off drugs, or to help children of addicts get the best possible start on life. "I think it's the worst thing that could probably happen," Lewis said. "You're not addressing the problem, and the problem is their addiction." But while several East Bay drug treatment experts agreed with Long Scott and Lewis, others said they understood the concept of Harris's program, or, like Hayward Drug Court Judge Peggy Hora, said their support or opposition to the idea depended on how it was applied. "Information is never bad, and if women choose to make that decision, I don't see where that's a problem, particularly if they're not making a permanent decision," Hora said. "I'm concerned if the only people who are being targeted for this information are women of color or poor women." Even those who would be eligible for the plan failed to reach a consensus on whether Harris's idea was brilliant or barbaric, ensuring the debate will continue long after the billboards are gone. "I think it's a good thing, and I think I'm in a position to say that," said Barbara Corley, a 41-year-old mother of one who is recovering from her cocaine addiction at Fremont's CURA Inc. residential program. "Why continue to have children and bring them into this world and you're going to mistreat them?" said Corley, whose child was reared by her parents. "From the beginning they have no chance in life. They're destined probably for jail, prison, death, whatever." But that solution seemed too final for others, including Dana Williams, a 38-year-old mother of two who is at CURA recovering from addictions to heroin and crack. "It's just a blessing to be able to have kids. Now that I'm in recovery, I might want to have more kids," she said. "I wouldn't sell myself short for $200." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D