Pubdate: Sun, 12 May 2002
Source: Elizabethton Star (TN)
Copyright: 2002 Elizabethton Newspapers, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.starhq.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1478
Author: Kathy Helms-Hughes

CARTER COUNTY SAYING 'NO' TO DRUGS, 'YES' TO DRUG COURT

It's no secret Carter County has a growing drug and alcohol problem.

What to do about it is the question.

The number of repeat offenders has shown that the current system is not 
working.

But is the community ready to try something new? Those who work within the 
court system say it's time to make a difference, and they believe "drug 
court" could be the answer. Since 1989 when the first drug court began in 
Dade County, Fla., nearly 140,000 drug-dependent offenders have entered the 
program and more than 70 percent are either still enrolled or have 
graduated, according to "Looking at a Decade of Drug Courts," a report 
prepared by the Drug Court Clearinghouse and Technical Assistance Project. 
But becoming "clean and sober" is only the first step toward graduation 
from drug court.

Participants must obtain a high school diploma or GED, maintain full-time 
employment, be current in all financial obligations -- including drug court 
fees and child support payments -- and sometimes even must have a community 
sponsor.

Some programs require community service, while one requires prospective 
graduates to prepare a two-year "life plan" to assure the court the 
participant has developed the necessary "tools" to lead a drug-free and 
crime-free life, the report states. There are 750 drug courts in existence 
nationwide and 500 in the planning stage, including one in Carter County, 
according to Vanessa Scott, drug court coordinator. Washington and Unicoi 
counties opened drug courts Oct. 1, 2001. Members of the Carter County drug 
court team in addition to Scott include: General Sessions Court Judge John 
Walton, Assistant District Attorney Mark Hill, Circuit Court Clerk John 
Paul Mathes, Comprehensive Community Services Probation Officer Tammy 
Eggleston, Elizabethton Chief of Police Roger Deal, CCSD Alcohol & Drug 
Treatment Counselor Sue Ramsey, Carter County Sheriff's Department 
Investigator Johnny Blankenship, and East Tennessee Graduate Student 
Jennifer Commons. The group recently attended a drug court workshop in 
Albuquerque, N.M., where they were able to observe the court in action. 
"The judge is what pulls everything together," said Scott. "The judge is 
the 'hammer' of drug court, and then out from the judge you have the 
prosecutors, the defense, the chief of police, the clerk's office, all the 
different treatment components, the probation components. It's very 
intensive judicial supervision, which is completely unlike traditional 
probation." Participants see the drug court judge at least every two weeks, 
one-on-one. "It's not defense attorneys talking on their behalf.

They actually come and talk directly to the judge [and] every aspect of 
their life is put under a magnifying glass," Scott said. Chief Deal said it 
was amazing how open participants were with the judge. "Actually, it's the 
first thing that I've ever seen that addresses the key cause of the problem 
and not just the crime. ... The participants were sanctioned when they did 
wrong and rewarded when they did good. It was a very positive thing to see 
through my eyes, as a police officer for the past 25 years." Once someone 
is referred to drug court, they undergo comprehensive treatment for alcohol 
and drug addiction, Scott said. "You just don't come into drug court to 
piddle around.

You're truly in there because you have a problem with alcohol and drug use. 
And that's what we focus on." Most participants have been using drugs at 
least 15 years, and generally longer.

At the time they enter the program, most are using multiple illegal drugs 
as well as alcohol, while some are also abusing prescription drugs.

About a quarter of participants have participated unsuccessfully in one or 
more prior treatment programs. Before each drug court session, team members 
get together in a "staffing" meeting and talk about every case coming up 
for review "and we come to a unanimous consensus on what should happen," 
Scott said. "If someone is not doing what they're supposed to, the drug 
court determines sanctions," which could include jail time, enhanced 
treatment, community service -- "anything the team can come up with to be a 
negative imposition that helps the offender along.

The whole object is to get them off of their drugs and back into society as 
a productive person." Persons who are repeatedly sanctioned, especially for 
the same offense, such as failing drug screens, are subject to being kicked 
out of the program and going to jail to serve out their original sentence. 
Participants are subject to frequent and random urinalysis. According to 
statistics from 14 drug courts in 10 states, the percentage of clean drug 
screens reported for participants in the program ranged from 84 percent to 
98 percent.

Of 49,969 urine samples performed at drug court in San Diego, Calif., 98 
percent were clean. The Carter County team currently is working on 
eligibility criteria.

At present, participants cannot have more than four DUIs. Fourth offense is 
considered a felony in Tennessee and drug court is a misdemeanor program.

Participants also cannot have a felony crime of violence, according to 
Judge Walton. "To me as a judge, its offering alternatives and getting 
treatment as opposed to jail time. It's geared toward helping people get 
better, as opposed to being in a vicious cycle and them coming back." Scott 
said the success rate is in excess of 80 percent reduction in recidivism. 
"Statistically, it's the best program there ever has been for the court 
system." The Carter County team is looking at drug court programs across 
the nation and what is working for them as it determines eligibility 
criteria, "so that we can have a program that is just ours or more 
successful than the ones that are already successful," Scott said. The 
Department of Justice has determined 10 key components which each program 
must contain. Chief Deal said one thing in Albuquerque that struck him was 
the "Free Bicycle Program," geared to participants who must maintain 
full-time employment. "If you lost your car, here's you a free bicycle -- 
you've got a way to get to work. I think that's a great idea. We recover I 
don't know how many bicycles a year that are never claimed, that we would 
be glad to donate," Deal said. According to Scott, the public bus service 
in Albuquerque installed bike racks on the backs of their buses as a result 
of the drug courts. "They've really come on strong out there." The drug 
court team has a final training session in September, after which it will 
set a target date for implementation and possibly set up a separate 
steering committee made up of people in the community. Success of the 
program really depends on community involvement, Scott said. "If you really 
want your program to work, you need, for instance, someone who owns a 
restaurant on the steering committee.

They may be able to offer your drug court clients jobs." Steering committee 
members also get a better understanding of what participants are going 
through and the time constraints they are under due to treatment, and may 
agree to work with them. Every day of their life, participants have 
activities they must perform during the 12 month period: seeing their 
probation officers, submitting to drug screens, undergoing counseling or 
attending AA meetings, to name a few. "It's very intense the whole time," 
Chief Deal said, "and if they go by what's handed down to them, they don't 
have time to get in trouble." Funding for drug court probably is the 
biggest barrier to overcome, according to Scott. "There is some federal 
funding that we certainly will submit a grant for." Team members spend 
their personal time to make drug court a reality, she said. "There's no 
funding whatsoever for the committee to get together and have meetings and 
plan. Everybody is doing it because they want an improvement." Circuit 
Court Clerk Mathes said he sees grandmothers and mothers every day, seeking 
help for family members.

Once drug court is implemented, "we'll have it." And when participants go 
to pay on their fines and costs, he said, "They'll be getting more for 
their dollar. "There's a need out here for it. Carter County is screaming 
for help," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens