Date: Sun, 9 Sep 2001 13:59:47 -0400 To: Matthew Gaylor <freematt@coil.com> From: Matthew Gaylor <freematt@coil.com> Subject: US: Legalization Movement Wants To Leave Drug Courts Out Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"Pubdate: Mon, 06 Sep 2001 Source: Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Weekly (US) Section: No. 30, Vol. 13; Pg. 5 ; ISSN: 1042-1394 Copyright: 2001 Information Access Company Contact: bmcalarny@manisses.com Address: P.O. Box 9758 Providence, RI 02940-9758 Fax: (401) 861-6370 Website: http://www.manisses.com/2newsletters/newsletters/adaw/adaw.htm Author: Tauber, Jeffrey S. Note: IAC-ACC-NO 77374350
LEGALIZATION MOVEMENT WANTS TO LEAVE DRUG COURTS OUT
Just two months ago I completed "Rational Drug Policy Reform: A Resource Guide" (see ADAW June 4). What we then knew of the next generation of drug legalization initiatives, their proponent's intent, and which states would be targeted was largely speculative.
Since then, we have learned a great deal that may make a difference in how substance abuse worker/practitioners react, as legalization proponents move to consolidate and expand their base, reach out to the media, and attempt to make the drug policy reform issue their own.
The agenda of the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation, (the major funder of legalization initiatives) and its many client organizations in promoting these initiatives has been a matter of concern, as states consider the best means of dealing with these proposals.
Until recently, it could be argued that their intent was benign, amounting to little more than the increasing of resources for treatment programs and the fine-tuning of court-based rehabilitation systems. For example, California's s successful initiative appeared to allow some room for the court's involvement in the treatment process.
The question is how much flexibility is going to be found in the next generation of initiatives? The answer seems to be clear. If the initiative proponents get their way, there will be little if any court involvement.
We now know that Florida, Ohio, and Michigan are the immediate targets for drug reform ballot initiatives. These initiatives go far beyond anything contemplated in California's Proposition 36.
If passed as presently drafted, they would essentially remove the court from its traditional role as monitor of treatment accountability. While all three state initiatives are dissimilar in some aspects, they are clear in their intent to give treatment providers full responsibility for treatment and monitoring of the drug-dependent offender.
For example, in both the Ohio and Michigan initiative drafts, there is a provision that would prohibit any requirement that a program participant waive treatment confidentiality as a condition of participation in the program.
That means that a treatment provider would be prohibited by federal law from divulging any treatment information to the court, including drug-test results, if a participant declines to sign a waiver, virtually eliminating the court's monitoring capability.
While some may argue that the responsibility for treatment accountability ought to rest with treatment, experience and science tell us otherwise. A recently published book, Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge our Misguided Drug Rehab System" [New Press], written by Lonnie Shavelson, a medical doctor and journalist, chronicled the experiences of five drug addicts trying to access drug treatment in San Francisco (see ADAW, June 4).
Shavelson followed the addicts for two years as they were stymied in their attempts to receive effective drug treatment by the treatment programs themselves and the bureaucracies that surrounded them.
Shavelson found that the only part of the San Francisco treatment system that wasn't dysfunctional and was in fact effective in coordinating treatment services and working with the drug addict was the San Francisco Drug Court.
Shavelson concludes, "The rehab methods employed by our drug courts provide an ideal model for successful drug treatment". This book is a critical read for all concerned with the growing movement to remove the court as an active partner in the treatment process.
Judge Tauber is the executive director of the Center for Problem Solving Courts (CPSC) and the former executive director of the National Association of Drug Court Professionals. For more information on this topic, visit the Center for Problem Solving Courts (CPSC's) Web site at: www.problemsolvingcourts.com
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