News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: PUB LTE: Drug Testing Can Be Suspect |
Title: | US CA: PUB LTE: Drug Testing Can Be Suspect |
Published On: | 2000-06-26 |
Source: | San Diego Union Tribune (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 18:19:10 |
DRUG TESTING CAN BE SUSPECT
Re: "Substance-abuse act dangerous, misleading" (Letters, June 23):
Sheriff Bill Kolender assured us that mandatory testing of drug addicts has
been proven to work.
But even court-ordered drug testing results can be altered to make it
appear that the subjects were not using illegal drugs. Any person with
access to a computer printer or copier can change the test results, and the
overburdened Department of Social Services accepts it.
This informal approach to treatment needs a lot of work before Kolender or
the courts can assume that it is effective.
Laurie Cohen, San Diego
It is not surprising to hear Kolender praise a system that keeps him and
his cohorts employed.
But the reality is that jails are more crowded, drug abuse is at an
all-time high and taxpayers pay more and more each year to incarcerate
people in places where they are able to continue their illicit drug habits.
I don't think a sheriff who can't keep drugs out of jail is in a position
to tell the public how to keep them out of their homes.
B.J. Prine, La Mesa
Re: "Substance-abuse act dangerous, misleading" (Letters, June 23):
Sheriff Bill Kolender assured us that mandatory testing of drug addicts has
been proven to work.
But even court-ordered drug testing results can be altered to make it
appear that the subjects were not using illegal drugs. Any person with
access to a computer printer or copier can change the test results, and the
overburdened Department of Social Services accepts it.
This informal approach to treatment needs a lot of work before Kolender or
the courts can assume that it is effective.
Laurie Cohen, San Diego
It is not surprising to hear Kolender praise a system that keeps him and
his cohorts employed.
But the reality is that jails are more crowded, drug abuse is at an
all-time high and taxpayers pay more and more each year to incarcerate
people in places where they are able to continue their illicit drug habits.
I don't think a sheriff who can't keep drugs out of jail is in a position
to tell the public how to keep them out of their homes.
B.J. Prine, La Mesa
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