Pubdate: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: ROBERTO SURO, Washington Post WHITE HOUSE SEEKS $18 BILLION TO COUNTER SPREAD OF ILLICIT DRUGS WASHINGTON -- Releasing the administration's annual drug control strategy Monday, Vice President Al Gore called drug abuse a "spiritual problem" and said that young people beset with feelings of emptiness and alienation are more likely to succumb to "messages that are part of a larger entity of evil." In response, Gore called for greater efforts to improve schools and create greater economic opportunity for young people especially in minority and low-income communities. The administration seeks nearly $18 billion for drug control programs in its new budget. The announcement was made as federal officials disclosed Monday that they have seen an alarming new "explosion" of cocaine production in Colombia. Retired Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, the White House drug czar, said cultivation of cocaine has jumped 26 percent in the past year in Colombia, with signs of an increase in opium production there as well. As with its previous drug control strategies, the administration allocates about two-thirds of anti-drug spending for law enforcement, interdiction and other efforts to attack the supply of illicit drugs; the remaining one-third goes to prevention, treatment and other programs to reduce the demand. McCaffrey, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, said, "We are confident that this is a balanced strategy." McCaffrey said that demand-reduction programs have been growing faster than those aimed at supply. If the administration's requests are adopted by Congress, spending on demand programs will have increased by 36 percent since 1996 compared with a 30 percent spending increase for supply programs. The drug strategy drew criticism from advocates of greater spending on programs meant to reduce the appetite for illegal drugs. The Drug Policy Foundation found the strategy "hypocritical and disappointing," and said that "the White House and the Congress need to shift from a criminal justice-based drug policy to a public health-based policy." Other critics charged that the drug plan is a repackaging of failed policies of the past. "This is a betrayal of what the White House says it's doing, promising a balanced strategy when it is lopsided," said Eric Sterling, former counsel to the House Judiciary Committee and president of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, a Washington research group. Sterling said the government was ignoring its own research, citing a Rand Corp. study that showed prevention and treatment were, dollar for dollar, the best way to cut down drug abuse. Again this year the centerpiece of the administration's prevention strategy is a multimedia advertising campaign designed to alert adolescents to the dangers of illegal drug use. With additional funding of $10 million requested in the next budget, the drug control media campaign would grow to $195 million. In unveiling the drug strategy, Gore emphasized his view of attending to the broad underlying causes of drug abuse rather than focusing only on more stringent attacks on criminal behavior. "It is an interconnected problem, and so our solution must also be interconnected," Gore said, pointing to spiritual, psychological, social and economic factors that combine to promote drug abuse, particularly among young people. "I've always believed that, along with all the other dimensions of this problem, this is a spiritual problem," he said. "And if young people have emptiness in their lives, if they have a lack of respect for the larger community of which they're a part, if they don't find ways to feel connected to the adults who are in the community, if they feel there's phoniness and hypocrisy and corruption and immorality, then they are much more vulnerable to the drug dealers, to the peers who tempt them with messages that are part of a larger entity of evil," Gore said. To counter this, Gore said, "We have to do more to expand opportunity, to create jobs for our young people, especially in communities that have too often been passed by in good times." Gore called for greater efforts to improve schools to help students "empower themselves with the trained minds that make them stronger." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck