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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Coalition Seeks New Drug Policy
Title:US WA: Coalition Seeks New Drug Policy
Published On:2005-03-04
Source:Seattle Times (WA)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 22:41:24
COALITION SEEKS NEW DRUG POLICY

The "War on Drugs" failed a long time ago and it's time to create a new
policy to control drug abuse, one based more on treatment and education and
less on punishment, members of a coalition of local doctors, lawyers,
church leaders and public-health officials said yesterday during a joint
news conference.

"We are spending an enormous amount of money on drug issues at present,"
said John Cary, president of the King County Bar Association, which is
spearheading the coalition. "This expenditure has a great impact on our
justice system at every level. And it's not paying off for us."

Coalition members said a more effective approach could begin with the state
Legislature creating a commission filled with experts from medicine,
education and law enforcement, among others, to study what they consider
the shortcomings of the current drug-policy approach and make
recommendations for change.

"Opening up such a discussion is a socially responsible endeavor," said
Sunil Aggarwal, president of the Washington Physicians for Social
Responsibility, "as it allows for frank and public discussion of how we
should best allocate scarce taxpayer resources in a manner that best
protects public health and safety."

The bar association, concurrent with the news conference, released a
145-page report three years in the making, authored by the association's
"Drug Policy Project."

It begins with a history of drug enforcement in the United States and ends
with suggestions for foundations for a new drug policy, specifically
state-level government regulation and control of drugs, but not
legalization or commercialization of them.

In between, the report discusses international trends in drug policy and
provides examples from Canada, Australia and Europe, including countries
that provide drugs to qualified addicts in controlled settings, or have
decriminalized and decreased penalties for certain drugs.

The report also says the current drug-control system facilitates an
underground "black market" for drugs that is controlled by criminals.

The coalition agrees to certain principles. For example, the way society
responds to drug abuse should not be more costly and cause greater harm
than drugs themselves, and there is too heavy an emphasis on putting drug
users in prison.

"It's an injustice to try to solve deep social and psychological, spiritual
and physical problems with one solution: incarceration," said the Rev.
Sanford Brown, executive director of the Church Council of Greater Seattle.
"We believe it's smarter social policy to be treating addicts than just to
be warehousing them."

However, coalition members stopped short of endorsing any specific plans.
That's in large part because the coalition continues to grow and there
isn't yet consensus among each of the groups about what the best specific
plans are, said Jeff Mero, president of the Washington State Public Health
Association.

Copies of the report are available from the bar association by calling
206-267-7001.
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