News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Judges Say New Drug Law Is Working |
Title: | US CA: Judges Say New Drug Law Is Working |
Published On: | 2002-02-05 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-31 05:05:57 |
JUDGES SAY NEW DRUG LAW IS WORKING
Treatment: Statistics indicate rehabilitation instead of jail fails to
reach 30%
of users, but many applaud
results.
About 30% of Los Angeles County defendants sentenced to drug
rehabilitation rather than prison or county jail under Proposition 36
either failed to show up or dropped out of treatment programs in the
first six months the new law was in effect, officials said.
However, judges and county officials say they are pleased with the
early results, considering drug users are the ones being served by
California's novel sentencing program.
"The preliminary indication is that this is working," said Carol
Morris Lowe, director of planning for the county Alcohol and Drug
Program. "We're going to have to refine it and tweak it, but I think
it's a good start." Proposition 36, approved in 2000 by 61% of the
voters, requires that nonviolent drug offenders convicted of
possession, use or transportation of drugs for personal use be offered
treatment and probation rather than being locked up.
The effectiveness of the law is being closely watched in other states,
including Michigan, Ohio and Florida, where the proposition's authors
are planning similar ballot measures.
Of the 4,329 defendants sentenced to drug-treatment programs in Los
Angeles County from July 1 to year's end, 69%, or 3,008, were still
receiving treatment at the end of the year, according to numbers
recently made available by the Alcohol and Drug Program. A few
participants had already finished their treatment by Dec. 31. Bench
warrants were issued for several hundred defendants who failed to
return to court.
No statewide statistics are yet available, but counties are collecting
data individually. In Orange County, 67% of the 1,978 defendants
referred for drug treatment were still in programs at the end of
December. San Diego County reported about 54% of its 1,578 defendants
still in treatment. The numbers in Ventura County were higher--81% of
the 992 people referred were in programs at year's end.
Officials across the state pointed out that the statistics were
preliminary.
"We'll have a much better picture of how this is all going to shake
out when we have a full year of data," said Los Angeles County
Superior Court Judge Ana Maria Luna, who is heading a countywide task
force on the law.
The task force made several findings based on statistics from the
first six months:
* Although the initiative was touted as a way to get first- and
second-time offenders into treatment, the average participant has been
arrested 14 times previously and has two felony and five misdemeanor
convictions.
* Four of five participants are men. More than half are 36 years old
and older. The racial breakdown is 36% Latino, 30% African American,
30% white, 2% Asian and 2% other.
* Fifteen percent of participants were deemed severely addicted to
drugs and required residential treatment. Forty-one percent were
referred to the lowest level of treatment, outpatient meetings several
times a week. The bulk--44%--were assigned to day programs lasting
several hours per session.
* Drug Court participation is down about 23% since Proposition 36 took
effect. Drug Court participants complete a yearlong treatment program
that involves frequent counseling, testing and court
appearances.
Necessary Tools Lacking, Judge Says
Superior Court Judge Ellen DeShazer, who handles both Drug Court and
Proposition 36 cases, said that she believes in treatment but that the
ballot measure was poorly written and inadequately funded. She also
said the law lacks serious sanctions and that defendants have too many
chances to fail.
The proposition "doesn't give the court all the tools it needs to make
it work," she said. "It's like a bark and no bite. It doesn't give you
the same leverage."
In Drug Court, judges can throw noncompliant participants in jail
immediately.
Elsewhere in the state, participants are more severely addicted than
expected, said Del Sayles-Owen, deputy director of the California
Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs. That has created a shortage
of residential beds in some counties, she said.
Despite worries in Los Angeles County that there would not be enough
courtrooms or treatment centers to handle the influx of drug
defendants, officials said last week that the law has put stress on
county resources but not overwhelmed them.
County Probation Department Bureau Chief Dave Davies said there have
been about 40% fewer defendants than anticipated participating in drug
treatment.
That's partly because nearly 300 eligible defendants refused
treatment, officials said. Many of them chose a short stay in county
jail over drug treatment, which can last up to a year.
"It would have really strained the system had the numbers come through
that we were expecting," Davies said.
But probation officers, judges and treatment providers said the county
still needs more than its state-allotted $30 million to make
Proposition 36 work. Additional funds could pay for more lawyers and
court staff to handle cases, as well as more drug counselors and
probation officers to supervise defendants, they say.
The head of a Gardena-based center, Larry Gentile, said that the
influx of clients from Proposition 36 has not been as heavy as he
anticipated, but that the number is rising. As of December, 42% of his
outpatient clients were Proposition 36 enrollees. Some staff members
at his Behavioral Health Services work six days a week and into the
night, Gentile said.
Sponsors of the ballot measure said its goals were to save the state
money, reduce the prison population, lower addiction rates and
increase public safety.
The California prison population dropped by about 4,355 inmates from
last July 1 to Dec. 31, according to the state Department of
Corrections. However, that decrease is only partly because of
Proposition 36, said department spokesman Russ Heimerich.
Treatment is far cheaper than incarceration. A year in prison costs
the state an average of $25,600, while treatment ranges from $840 to
$7,400, according to the Northern California-based Drug Policy
Alliance, which championed the initiative.
"It has had an immediate impact in that we are starting to see some
people diverted who might normally have had felony convictions,"
Heimerich said. "But it's not going to have a huge impact on the
[prison] population until further down the road."
When it comes to reducing addiction, Luna, the superior court judge,
said that she would like to see even more defendants follow through on
their drug treatment, but that she recognizes the challenges. Some of
the defendants, she said, are homeless, have been battling drug
addiction their entire lives or suffer from mental illness. Many also
lack motivation, she added.
"They don't have the resources to provide for their basic
needs--shelter, food, medication," Luna said. "This is not just a
matter of going to meetings. They have issues that go far beyond that."
Participants are required to visit an assessment center for evaluation
and then to enroll in a treatment center, often without money or
transportation to do so.
The county needs to make it possible for defendants to go directly
from court to treatment centers, said Bob Mimura, director of the
county's Criminal Justice Coordinating Committee.
"There are a lot of little hurdles," he said, each one making it more
difficult to remain off drugs.
Then there is the problem of drug testing during treatment, which is
not funded under the law. Thus defendants or treatment centers have
had to pick up the costs. A new law set aside $8.4 million statewide
for testing, but Los Angeles County has yet to receive its $2-million
share.
Personal Stories Are Heartening
The Drug Policy Alliance expects 60% to 70% of defendants to complete
treatment. Dan Abrahamson, director of legal affairs for the group,
said there are many personal stories from people who are already
benefiting from Proposition 36.
"For us, that's what it was about," he said.
Superior Court Judge Rita Miller said defendants in her courtroom have
similarly inspiring stories. One recovering addict had his first sober
Thanksgiving with family members in 20 years.
William Anderson, 52, hopes he will be a Proposition 36 success
story.
A heroin user for 25 years, he said he has been locked up several
times for drug violations. On Halloween night, he was picked up again.
"I got tired of going to jail," Anderson said. "I got tired of waking
up in the morning sick."
He appeared before Miller last week for a progress report. Anderson
said he had not used drugs since he was sentenced Jan. 14. Miller
congratulated Anderson for enrolling in a program.
Treatment: Statistics indicate rehabilitation instead of jail fails to
reach 30%
of users, but many applaud
results.
About 30% of Los Angeles County defendants sentenced to drug
rehabilitation rather than prison or county jail under Proposition 36
either failed to show up or dropped out of treatment programs in the
first six months the new law was in effect, officials said.
However, judges and county officials say they are pleased with the
early results, considering drug users are the ones being served by
California's novel sentencing program.
"The preliminary indication is that this is working," said Carol
Morris Lowe, director of planning for the county Alcohol and Drug
Program. "We're going to have to refine it and tweak it, but I think
it's a good start." Proposition 36, approved in 2000 by 61% of the
voters, requires that nonviolent drug offenders convicted of
possession, use or transportation of drugs for personal use be offered
treatment and probation rather than being locked up.
The effectiveness of the law is being closely watched in other states,
including Michigan, Ohio and Florida, where the proposition's authors
are planning similar ballot measures.
Of the 4,329 defendants sentenced to drug-treatment programs in Los
Angeles County from July 1 to year's end, 69%, or 3,008, were still
receiving treatment at the end of the year, according to numbers
recently made available by the Alcohol and Drug Program. A few
participants had already finished their treatment by Dec. 31. Bench
warrants were issued for several hundred defendants who failed to
return to court.
No statewide statistics are yet available, but counties are collecting
data individually. In Orange County, 67% of the 1,978 defendants
referred for drug treatment were still in programs at the end of
December. San Diego County reported about 54% of its 1,578 defendants
still in treatment. The numbers in Ventura County were higher--81% of
the 992 people referred were in programs at year's end.
Officials across the state pointed out that the statistics were
preliminary.
"We'll have a much better picture of how this is all going to shake
out when we have a full year of data," said Los Angeles County
Superior Court Judge Ana Maria Luna, who is heading a countywide task
force on the law.
The task force made several findings based on statistics from the
first six months:
* Although the initiative was touted as a way to get first- and
second-time offenders into treatment, the average participant has been
arrested 14 times previously and has two felony and five misdemeanor
convictions.
* Four of five participants are men. More than half are 36 years old
and older. The racial breakdown is 36% Latino, 30% African American,
30% white, 2% Asian and 2% other.
* Fifteen percent of participants were deemed severely addicted to
drugs and required residential treatment. Forty-one percent were
referred to the lowest level of treatment, outpatient meetings several
times a week. The bulk--44%--were assigned to day programs lasting
several hours per session.
* Drug Court participation is down about 23% since Proposition 36 took
effect. Drug Court participants complete a yearlong treatment program
that involves frequent counseling, testing and court
appearances.
Necessary Tools Lacking, Judge Says
Superior Court Judge Ellen DeShazer, who handles both Drug Court and
Proposition 36 cases, said that she believes in treatment but that the
ballot measure was poorly written and inadequately funded. She also
said the law lacks serious sanctions and that defendants have too many
chances to fail.
The proposition "doesn't give the court all the tools it needs to make
it work," she said. "It's like a bark and no bite. It doesn't give you
the same leverage."
In Drug Court, judges can throw noncompliant participants in jail
immediately.
Elsewhere in the state, participants are more severely addicted than
expected, said Del Sayles-Owen, deputy director of the California
Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs. That has created a shortage
of residential beds in some counties, she said.
Despite worries in Los Angeles County that there would not be enough
courtrooms or treatment centers to handle the influx of drug
defendants, officials said last week that the law has put stress on
county resources but not overwhelmed them.
County Probation Department Bureau Chief Dave Davies said there have
been about 40% fewer defendants than anticipated participating in drug
treatment.
That's partly because nearly 300 eligible defendants refused
treatment, officials said. Many of them chose a short stay in county
jail over drug treatment, which can last up to a year.
"It would have really strained the system had the numbers come through
that we were expecting," Davies said.
But probation officers, judges and treatment providers said the county
still needs more than its state-allotted $30 million to make
Proposition 36 work. Additional funds could pay for more lawyers and
court staff to handle cases, as well as more drug counselors and
probation officers to supervise defendants, they say.
The head of a Gardena-based center, Larry Gentile, said that the
influx of clients from Proposition 36 has not been as heavy as he
anticipated, but that the number is rising. As of December, 42% of his
outpatient clients were Proposition 36 enrollees. Some staff members
at his Behavioral Health Services work six days a week and into the
night, Gentile said.
Sponsors of the ballot measure said its goals were to save the state
money, reduce the prison population, lower addiction rates and
increase public safety.
The California prison population dropped by about 4,355 inmates from
last July 1 to Dec. 31, according to the state Department of
Corrections. However, that decrease is only partly because of
Proposition 36, said department spokesman Russ Heimerich.
Treatment is far cheaper than incarceration. A year in prison costs
the state an average of $25,600, while treatment ranges from $840 to
$7,400, according to the Northern California-based Drug Policy
Alliance, which championed the initiative.
"It has had an immediate impact in that we are starting to see some
people diverted who might normally have had felony convictions,"
Heimerich said. "But it's not going to have a huge impact on the
[prison] population until further down the road."
When it comes to reducing addiction, Luna, the superior court judge,
said that she would like to see even more defendants follow through on
their drug treatment, but that she recognizes the challenges. Some of
the defendants, she said, are homeless, have been battling drug
addiction their entire lives or suffer from mental illness. Many also
lack motivation, she added.
"They don't have the resources to provide for their basic
needs--shelter, food, medication," Luna said. "This is not just a
matter of going to meetings. They have issues that go far beyond that."
Participants are required to visit an assessment center for evaluation
and then to enroll in a treatment center, often without money or
transportation to do so.
The county needs to make it possible for defendants to go directly
from court to treatment centers, said Bob Mimura, director of the
county's Criminal Justice Coordinating Committee.
"There are a lot of little hurdles," he said, each one making it more
difficult to remain off drugs.
Then there is the problem of drug testing during treatment, which is
not funded under the law. Thus defendants or treatment centers have
had to pick up the costs. A new law set aside $8.4 million statewide
for testing, but Los Angeles County has yet to receive its $2-million
share.
Personal Stories Are Heartening
The Drug Policy Alliance expects 60% to 70% of defendants to complete
treatment. Dan Abrahamson, director of legal affairs for the group,
said there are many personal stories from people who are already
benefiting from Proposition 36.
"For us, that's what it was about," he said.
Superior Court Judge Rita Miller said defendants in her courtroom have
similarly inspiring stories. One recovering addict had his first sober
Thanksgiving with family members in 20 years.
William Anderson, 52, hopes he will be a Proposition 36 success
story.
A heroin user for 25 years, he said he has been locked up several
times for drug violations. On Halloween night, he was picked up again.
"I got tired of going to jail," Anderson said. "I got tired of waking
up in the morning sick."
He appeared before Miller last week for a progress report. Anderson
said he had not used drugs since he was sentenced Jan. 14. Miller
congratulated Anderson for enrolling in a program.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...