Pubdate: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2001 Section: The Americas Page: 10 Contact: 1 Southwark Bridge, London, SE1 9HL, UK Fax: +44 171 873 3922 Website: http://www.ft.com/ Author: Nancy Dunne Cited: Lindesmith Center Drug Policy Foundation http://www.drugpolicy.org/ ILLEGAL DRUG USE IN US REMAINS 'RAMPANT' General Barry McCaffrey, US drug czar, yesterday pointed out advances made in the controversial "war on drugs" during the Clinton years but acknowledged that illegal drug use was still rampant. In his final report on anti-drug efforts over the past eight years, Mr McCaffrey cited a 21 per cent drop in teenage drug use over two years and a steep decline in drug-related crime. Federal funding for prevention programmes has increased by 55 per cent since 1996, and the number of drug courts mandating supervised drug treatment for non-violent offenders has risen from 12 in 1994 to 700 now. Yet, said Mr McCaffrey, "we're still looking at a US society in which 6 per cent of us last month used an illegal drug". There are an estimated 14m users each year. There are also 52,000 deaths, and Dollars 110bn (Pounds 73bn) in damages per year. The anti-drug crusade has brought widespread criticism. Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the New York-based Lindesmith Center Drug Policy Foundation, said it "increasingly violates constitutional rights, and yet has resulted in increased deaths from overdose and HIV . . . It's time for us to focus on a new bottom line - one that emphasises the reduction of death, disease, crime and suffering rather than simply reducing drug use". The Clinton administration put billions of dollars into drug treatment and prevention. Of the Dollars 19.2bn for drug programmes last year, Dollars 2.78bn went into treatment. However, "there are approximately 5m drug abusers who need immediate treatment and who constitute a major portion of domestic demand", the report said. The administration has spent Dollars 1bn on a media campaign, featuring among others Spider-Man, to discourage drug use among young people. "We are reaching 95 per cent of our audience with messages 7.5 times a week," Mr McCaffrey said. The number of drug users in prisons continues to mount. More than half the inmates in state and federal prisons - 700,000 in all - have mental health or substance abuse problems. But Mr McCaffrey said there was now "an enormous number of alternatives to incarceration" for non-violent drug law offenders. Jim Bovard, a prominent critic of the anti-drug crusade, said: "Drug use is far higher now than when Clinton took office." Mr McCaffrey said he had briefed President-elect George W. Bush on the drug strategy. "This has been a bipartisan, congressionally-supported effort with significant enhancement and resources," he said. "I think it's due for a re-look, and I'm sure they'll give it careful consideration." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake