Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jan 2015 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2015 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Mia Rabson Page: A5 REHAB-CENTRED DRUG COURT GETS FUNDING RENEWED OTTAWA - Non-violent drug addicts who break the law will again have the option of rehab instead of jail time as federal funding revives the Winnipeg Drug Treatment Court. Ottawa finally committed to renewing funding for the court, offering $1.2 million over the next three years, the provincial government confirmed Friday. The court stopped accepting new clients last spring because Ottawa had not agreed to extend the funding beyond the end of March. "This successful program addresses the root cause of criminal behaviour to give participants the supports and strategies they need to live a productive and positive lifestyle," Manitoba Justice Minister James Allum said in a news release. A statement from federal Justice Minister Peter MacKay's office late Friday said the funds will be in place by April 1. Manitoba Justice is in the process of taking over administration of the court from the Addictions Foundation of Manitoba, which has run it with federal funding and provincial assistance since 2005. "The federal government started to advise they had some concerns flowing the money to non-governmental organizations more than a year ago," said Shauna Curtin, the assistant deputy minister of justice for Manitoba courts. Curtin said she hopes to begin accepting new clients as early as April 1, noting work to take the court over from the AFM has been underway for months. "We knew this was likely going to happen," she told the Free Press in an interview. She said there are 25 people in the program right now, and normally there is room for about 36. There is a waiting list, and as soon as the restructuring is complete, there are people ready to start. Ottawa's funding commitment is actually 20 per cent less than its previous commitment of about $500,000 a year, but Curtin said the court hasn't actually been spending all of its allotted amount in recent years, so the cut shouldn't affect the program. Shannon Prithipaul, head of the Criminal Lawyers Association of Canada, said drug courts are "a very big deal." "It's one of the ways the courts can respond more meaningfully," said Prithipaul. She said drug courts are a shift in thinking away from simple punishment and toward treating offenders as an individuals who can be redeemed. The Winnipeg Drug Treatment Court is an option for some non-violent offenders whose crimes were committed as a result of drug addiction. They must apply to the program, the Crown and drug-court judge must agree to admit them, and they have to plead guilty to their crimes, make regular appearances before the drug-court judge and undergo frequent drug testing and counselling. Since 2006, Curtin said 76 people have graduated from the Winnipeg Drug Treatment Court and about one in seven have reoffended. Provincial statistics report about two-thirds of people released from provincial jails will commit another crime, as do one-third of those given conditional sentences and one-quarter of those placed on probation. Prithipaul said rehabilitating a drug addict is a significant reduction in costs to the health, justice and social-service systems. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt