Pubdate: Sun, 01 Apr 2007
Source: Hartford Courant (CT)
Copyright: 2007 The Hartford Courant
Contact:  http://www.courant.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183
Author: Robert L. Painter, M. D.
Note: Dr. Robert L. Painter, a Republican, is minority leader on the 
Hartford city council. He is a retired surgeon.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

TAKING THE CRIME OUT OF DRUGS

I have had a chance to look deeply into the face of drug use in 
Hartford after five years on the city council. I have had many 
conversations in our neighborhoods, where one out of six children has 
a family member in prison. I've talked to prison inmates and convened 
national conferences at Trinity College on the drug burden the city 
bears. I have learned much about causes of and recovery from drug 
addiction and the social and economic costs of these problems.

Neighborhood gunfire forced a lockdown at the Dominick F. Burns 
Elementary School on March 1. Burns schoolchildren still pass by drug 
dealing on the way to school every day. Hartford is the Wal-Mart for 
illegal drugs; the market is the reason for the violence and most of 
the crime in the city.

Since President Richard Nixon's drug war in 1971, the United States 
has sprayed drug crops in their countries of origin, interdicted the 
transportation of drugs into the country, and arrested those who 
possess, sell or use illegal drugs. This costs us about $60 billion a 
year. Users spend another $200 billion or more a year buying drugs.

In spite of this, drugs are cheaper, purer and more available than 
they were 10 years ago. We are losing our children to the urban 
streets and our kids in the suburbs to overdose deaths. A handful of 
drug kings terrorize city residents, most of whom are trying to keep 
their children safe and to give them a better life.

The unemployed, underemployed and destitute cannot afford affordable, 
appropriate and adequate addiction treatment. These folks, largely in 
the cities and largely people of color, end up arrested and 
imprisoned. Eighty-five percent of the prison population in 
Connecticut is there for nonviolent drug-related crimes.

We will never eliminate drug addiction, just as we did not eliminate 
all of the problems of alcohol when we ended Prohibition. We did, 
however, get rid of the violence associated with the illegal alcohol 
trade. But when it comes to drugs, we stumble over new approaches for 
fear they will make matters worse. It is considered political suicide 
for legislators to talk of changing drug laws. But a large number of 
citizens are ahead of politicians in considering alternatives to our 
present approach.

Some of the difficulty results from misinformation. For example, most 
folks think that marijuana is a gateway drug. The fact is that only 
about 2 percent of marijuana users progress to hard drugs. We can't 
talk about new approaches without reliable data, and we do have that data.

It is time to begin the conversation about alternatives. I would 
suggest the following as starting points:

The federal government should encourage, not limit, research into the 
uses and dangers of marijuana and hemp.

Bring marijuana under the law to control its production, processing, 
distribution, licensing, taxing and sale. That would also keep it out 
of the hands of youth. We should treat it as we do alcohol and 
tobacco, substances that kill hundreds of thousands of people 
annually. Ironically, there are no recorded deaths from marijuana use.

Those convicted of nonviolent drug-related crimes of possession or 
use should, with the help of street social workers, be put into 
monitored treatment programs instead of incarcerated. The cost of an 
adequate treatment program is a small percentage of the cost of imprisonment.

We should monitor the experiences of countries that run medically 
safe injection sites for heroin. They have seen a reduction of 
violence, a decrease in hard drug use and less recidivism.

We should remember that relapse following drug treatment is the norm 
and part of treatment, and not a personal failure requiring 
punishment with prison time.

Nonviolent drug offenses should be considered public health problems 
rather than legal problems.

Funds to support such a program could come from licensing fees and 
taxes, from removing the financial incentives for an illegal black 
market, and from freeing up federal funds now used for the drug war.

Let's start the conversation for real reform.

Dr. Robert L. Painter, a Republican, is minority leader on the 
Hartford city council. He is a retired surgeon.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman