Pubdate: Sat, 31 Oct 2015
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2015 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Katharine Q. Seelye, the New York Times

DRUG WAR SHIFTS AS HEROIN EPIDEMIC HITS WHITES

Zero Tolerance No Longer So Easy

More Impetus to Treat Addiction As a Disease

NEWTON, N.H. - When Courtney Griffin was using heroin, she lied, 
disappeared and stole from her parents to support her $400-a-day 
habit. Her family paid her debts, never filed a police report and 
kept her addiction secret - until she was found dead last year of an overdose.

At Griffin's funeral, her parents decided to acknowledge the reality 
that redefined their lives: Their 20-year-old daughter, who played 
the French horn in high school and dreamed of living in Hawaii, had 
been kicked out of the Marines for drugs. Eventually she overdosed at 
her boyfriend's grandmother's house, where she died alone.

"When I was a kid, junkies were the worst," Doug Griffin, 63, 
Courtney's father, recalled in their southeastern New Hampshire home. 
"I used to have an office in New York City. I saw them."

Noting "junkies" is a word he would never use now, he said that these 
days, "They're working right next to you and you don't even know it. 
They're in my daughter's bedroom - they are my daughter."

When the nation's long-running war against drugs was defined by the 
crack epidemic and based in poor, predominantly black urban areas, 
the public response was defined by zero tolerance and stiff prison sentences.

But today's heroin crisis is different. While heroin use has climbed 
among all demographic groups, it has skyrocketed among whites; nearly 
90 percent of those who tried heroin for the first time in the past 
decade were white.

Political shift

The growing number of families of those lost to heroin - many in 
suburbs and towns - are using their influence, anger and grief to 
cushion the country's approach to drugs, from altering the language 
used regarding addiction to prodding government to treat it not as a 
crime, but as a disease.

"Because the demographic of people affected are more white, more 
middle class, these are parents who are empowered," said Michael 
Botticelli, director of the White House Office of National Drug 
Control Policy, better known as the nation's drug czar. "They know 
how to call a legislator, they know how to get angry with their 
insurance company, they know how to advocate. They have been so 
instrumental in changing the conversation."

The presidential candidates of both parties are talking about the 
drug epidemic, with Hillary Rodham Clinton hosting forums on the 
issue as Jeb Bush and Carly Fiorina tell their own stories of loss 
while calling for more care and empathy.

Last week, President Obama traveled to West Virginia, a mostly white 
state with high levels of overdoses, to discuss his $133 million 
proposal to expand access for drug-treatment and prevention programs.

The Justice Department is also preparing to release roughly 6,000 
inmates from federal prisons as part of an effort to roll back the 
severe penalties issued to nonviolent drug dealers in decades past.

In one of the most striking shifts in this new era, some local police 
departments have stopped punishing many heroin users. In Gloucester, 
Mass., those who walk into the police station and ask for help, even 
if they are carrying drugs or needles, are no longer arrested. 
Instead, they are diverted to treatment, despite questions about the 
police departments' unilateral authority to do so. It is an approach 
being replicated by other police departments nationwide.

"How these policies evolve in the first place, and the connection 
with race, seems very stark," said Marc Mauer, executive director of 
the Sentencing Project, which examines racial issues in the 
criminal-justice system.

Still, he and other experts said, a consensus seems to be emerging: 
The drug problem will not be solved by arrests alone, but rather by treatment.

Changing terrain

Heroin's spread into suburbs and towns grew out of an earlier wave of 
addiction to prescription painkillers; together the two trends are 
ravaging the country.

Deaths from heroin rose to 8,260 in 2013, quadrupling since 2000 and 
aggravating what some were already calling the worst drug-overdose 
epidemic in U.S. history.

Overall, drug overdoses cause more deaths than car crashes, with 
opioids such as OxyContin and other pain medications killing 44 people a day.

In New England, the epidemic has grabbed officials by the lapels. The 
region's old industrial cities, small towns and rural outposts are 
seeing a near-daily parade of drug-summit meetings, task forces, 
vigils against heroin, pronouncements from lawmakers and news reports 
on the heroin crisis.

New Hampshire is typical of the hardest-hit states. Last year, 325 
people died of opioid overdoses, a 68 percent increase from 2013. 
Potentially hundreds more deaths were averted by emergency-medical 
workers, who last year administered naloxone, a medication that 
reverses the effects of opioid overdoses, in more than 1,900 cases.

Adding to the anxiety among parents, the state also ranks second to 
last, ahead only of Texas, in access to treatment programs. New 
Hampshire has about 100,000 people in need of treatment, state 
officials say, but the state's publicly financed system can serve 
just 4 percent of them.

Since New Hampshire holds the first-in-the-nation presidential 
primary, residents have repeatedly raised the issue of heroin with 
the 2016 candidates.

Clinton still recalls her surprise that the first question she was 
asked in April, at her first open meeting in New Hampshire as a 
candidate, was about heroin.

Many of the 15 Republican candidates for president have heard similar 
stories, and they are sharing their own. "I have some personal 
experience with this as a dad, and it is the most heartbreaking thing 
in the world to have to go through," Jeb Bush, the former governor of 
Florida, said at a town hall-style meeting in Merrimack, N.H., in 
August. His daughter, Noelle, was jailed twice while in rehab.

Some black scholars said they welcomed the shift, while expressing 
frustration that earlier calls by African Americans for a more 
empathetic approach were largely ignored.

"This new turn to a more compassionate view of those addicted to 
heroin is welcome," said Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, who specializes 
in racial issues at Columbia and UCLA law schools. "But," she added, 
"one cannot help notice that had this compassion existed for African 
Americans caught up in addiction and the behaviors it produces, the 
devastating impact of mass incarceration upon entire communities 
would never have happened."

Now, the political engagement about heroin has helped create what 
Timothy Rourke, chairman of the New Hampshire Governor's Commission 
on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, says is an impetus for change, not unlike 
the confluence of events that produced a response to the AIDS 
epidemic. "You have a lot of people dying, it's no longer just 'those 
people,' " he said.

Among recent bills passed by the New Hampshire Legislature in 
response is one that gives friends and family access to naloxone, the 
antioverdose medication. Griffin, shortly after his daughter died, 
was among those testifying in favor of the bill. The law went into 
effect June 2.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom