HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Your Money On Drugs
Pubdate: Mon, 17 May 2004
Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Copyright: 2004 The Ottawa Citizen
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

YOUR MONEY ON DRUGS

Imagine that the federal and provincial governments spend about $1 billion 
a year on a program, but the auditor general discovers no one really knows 
where the money went, or if the money is doing any good at all. Surely the 
program would be a prime candidate to be axed. But it's not, and most 
politicians don't even want to talk about it.

If this description of Canada's drug policy seems extreme, consider what 
Auditor General Sheila Fraser wrote in December, 2001: "The federal 
government could not provide complete information on resources spent to 
address illicit drugs." Still, Ms. Fraser and her staff cobbled together 
their own rough estimate of total spending: $500 million a year. Of that, 
they estimated 95 per cent went to law enforcement.

But provinces and cities also pay for drug prosecutions and punishments, so 
a Senate committee attempted to calculate and add in those costs. It 
concluded total spending on drug enforcement alone may be as much as $1 
billion a year.

What benefit Canadian taxpayers get for this lavish spending is a mystery. 
The auditor general noted that the government does not have clear 
expectations for its spending and that even if it did, there is no way to 
measure whether those goals are being met because there are no national 
data on drug use, convictions or sentences. In other words, the government 
doesn't know what it's spending, why it's spending it, or whether its 
efforts are working.

All of which makes the gun registry look like a model of sound public 
policy. But it gets worse.

Independent studies have consistently concluded that drug enforcement 
produces few, if any, real benefits. Last week, a study published in the 
Canadian Medical Association Journal found that a major police crackdown in 
Vancouver's downtown eastside ghetto didn't reduce drug use, but only 
served to drive drug dealers and addicts into new neighbourhoods.

An earlier Vancouver study similarly found that the largest heroin seizure 
in Canadian history had no effect on the price of drugs, the amount of drug 
use or the rate of overdoses.

With such poor results from Canada's drug policies, it's no wonder that 
politicians won't label this the boondoggle it is. If they did, they would 
have to talk about alternatives, and that's politically explosive. It's a 
lot easier to just pretend not to see the fiasco.

Understandable as that is, it's also dishonourable. A billion dollars a 
year could do a lot of good in health, education or many other areas. 
Parliamentarians have a duty to demand proof that this money is being spent 
wisely. If they don't have the courage to do so during the upcoming 
election campaign, they should make it a priority when they take up their 
seats in the next Parliament. 
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MAP posted-by: Thunder