Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jul 2001
Source: Red Bluff Daily News (CA)
Copyright: 2001 Red Bluff Daily News
Contact:  http://redbluffdailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1079

THE DRUG TEST

California has launched an experiment involving drug rehabilitation that, 
if it achieves its desired results, could help other states make sensible 
drug policies. In essence, it requires the judicial system to order 
treatment for first- and second-time, nonviolent drug offenders rather than 
jailing them.

Voters approved the diversion approach last year for an estimated 36,000 
people convicted each year for using or possessing drugs. They will be 
given counseling or time in a rehabilitation center. If they successfully 
complete the treatment, their criminal record will be erased.

This is contrary to many states' drug policies in recent years, which 
involved tough, often mandatory sentences. The result has been a costly and 
rapid expansion in prison populations.

Common wisdom has told states that harsher penalties would deter drug use, 
sales, manufacturing, transportation and smuggling. Perhaps it has done so, 
though any significant effect on the amount of drugs in circulation in this 
country is difficult to discern.

Others have suggested, to little effect, that most drug users need 
rehabilitation, not jail. There haven't been enough resources available in 
communities around the country to treat all the addicts. And the jail 
option has appealed to politicians eager to be seen as tough on crime.

California is leaping in with something different. The only precedent is 
Arizona, which has diverted about 6,000 drug offenders a year for four 
years. California's effort to handle six times that many can be expected to 
be expensive -- $120 million a year has been allocated -- and complex.

Officials in other states where drug cases have clogged the courts and drug 
offenders have overcrowded the prison systems will be watching California 
closely. The outcome is bound to have an impact -- one way or the other -- 
on how other states look at their drug-control programs.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens