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News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Editorial: Show Us The Money For The War On Ice
Title:US HI: Editorial: Show Us The Money For The War On Ice
Published On:2004-01-13
Source:Honolulu Advertiser (HI)
Fetched On:2008-08-23 16:10:42
SHOW US THE MONEY FOR THE WAR ON ICE

Last year, a 13-year-old Maui boy was caught showing a classmate his
stash of crystal methamphetamine. This was not his first drug-related
brush with the law, and he was more than ready to enter a treatment
program.

But the wait was at least six months. His parents and teachers worried
he'd never survive the wait and would get into worse trouble.
Fortunately, he had an aggressive support network, and strings were
pulled so that he could move up the waiting list.

In these matters, you see, timing is everything. But most kids are not
so fortunate.

According to the Joint House-Senate Task Force on Ice and Drug
Abatement, some 5,000 adolescents in Hawai'i who need treatment for
addiction to crystal meth and other drugs do not receive it.

Which is why we're pleased to hear that the legislative task force
charged with mapping out a strategy to combat Hawai'i's ice epidemic
has placed a priority on intervention and treatment for teenagers.

In a report released yesterday, the panel recommends the state spend
more than $21 million on the war on ice, including:

- - $10.7 million to boost adult drug-abuse treatment programs,
with a priority given to women of childbearing age, pregnant women,
parents with young children in the home and Hawaiians.

- - $4.5 million to expanding school-based drug treatment
programs to the intermediate school level to identify school dropouts.

- - $3.6 million for youth drug-abuse prevention programs.

- - $1.2 million to expand Drug Court programs.

- - $850,000 to treat first-time nonviolent drug offenders as an
alternative to incarceration.

- - $300,000 to study the impact of illicit meth labs on
Hawai'i's natural environment, particularly the groundwater supply.

In addition, the study calls for an approach that would shift more
treatment costs to private insurers, allow families to force members
into treatment without filing criminal charges, and toughen prison
sentences for selling and manufacturing the drug.

It all sounds impressive, but the fact is, we won't know how serious
the state is about winning the war against ice until we see a
financial commitment.

The report says nothing about where the money will come from. Surely,
that should be the next step: identifying funding sources so that we
can expand treatment programs and reduce the waiting.

We're losing ground to this powerfully addictive drug every day; we
simply don't have the luxury of time.
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