News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Drug Court Funding Denied |
Title: | US MO: Drug Court Funding Denied |
Published On: | 2004-06-07 |
Source: | The Southeast Missourian (MO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 08:24:06 |
DRUG COURT FUNDING DENIED
An application for a federal grant of $120,000 to begin a family drug
court has been denied.
Earlier this year the Community Assessment Partnership of the
Community Caring Council and United Way of Southeast Missouri
identified a family drug court as a high priority hoping to end "the
cycle of abuse at home and reunite parents and children." The
organizations said they believed if families could get joint
counseling through a drug court, then drug abuse across generations
and family lines would be reduced.
The Department of Justice provides the money for drug interdiction and
treatment programs. Officials there have said they had millions of
dollars more in proposals than they have in money to fund those
programs, said drug court director Steve Narrow. The department will
continue to fund existing programs but will not provide money for new
ones.
Narrow said he was disappointed by the decision.
"We will do our best to find other funding sources," he said.
In addition to trying to find another source to begin a family drug
court, Narrow also faces the need to find a funding source to continue
the two that are currently in place. The Byrne grant that provides the
money through the Department of Justice provides only startup money
for the first four years. The local courts are currently in their
third funding year.
Drug court, he said, has been successful in helping mostly first-time
offenders get the counseling and support they need to get off and stay
off drugs. The same fund that feeds drug court also keeps such
programs as the Southeast Missouri Drug Task Force going, but with a
difference Narrow said he finds baffling.
"There is no ceiling on how many years the drug task force can apply
for the grant; it's open-ended," Narrow said. "We continue to hear
from the Department of Justice that the drug problem is not just a
problem of law enforcement; it's a medical problem and a social
problem. But their money certainly is not where their mouth is."
'A paradox of government'
Narrow said he doesn't see drug court as competing with the task force
for money.
"We need to be fighting this battle on many fronts," Narrow said.
"I've always found that a paradox of government. They say one thing
and do another."
The Byrne grant provided the adult drug court over its four-year
startup with a total of $480,000; the juvenile drug court has received
$128,000. Twenty-five percent is matched by dedicated funds the state
legislature provided. Money from other state agencies is not available
with the budget cuts the state has endured. However during the
previous budget year, Narrow said, when the legislature made the first
round of drastic cuts in its budget, drug court was the only entity
that got more money than the previous year.
"Our track record shows that it works on a very real level," he said.
"Missouri is a leader in drug courts; I'm proud of that. We have over
70 drug courts in Missouri right now."
Since 2001, 93 adults and juveniles have been through the Cape
Girardeau County drug court system.
Narrow said he will submit another application to the Justice
Department next year for family drug court. At the same time, next
July he will have to worry about where he will get funding for the two
drug courts already in place.
"We will do something," he said. "We will find enough funding
somewhere."
An application for a federal grant of $120,000 to begin a family drug
court has been denied.
Earlier this year the Community Assessment Partnership of the
Community Caring Council and United Way of Southeast Missouri
identified a family drug court as a high priority hoping to end "the
cycle of abuse at home and reunite parents and children." The
organizations said they believed if families could get joint
counseling through a drug court, then drug abuse across generations
and family lines would be reduced.
The Department of Justice provides the money for drug interdiction and
treatment programs. Officials there have said they had millions of
dollars more in proposals than they have in money to fund those
programs, said drug court director Steve Narrow. The department will
continue to fund existing programs but will not provide money for new
ones.
Narrow said he was disappointed by the decision.
"We will do our best to find other funding sources," he said.
In addition to trying to find another source to begin a family drug
court, Narrow also faces the need to find a funding source to continue
the two that are currently in place. The Byrne grant that provides the
money through the Department of Justice provides only startup money
for the first four years. The local courts are currently in their
third funding year.
Drug court, he said, has been successful in helping mostly first-time
offenders get the counseling and support they need to get off and stay
off drugs. The same fund that feeds drug court also keeps such
programs as the Southeast Missouri Drug Task Force going, but with a
difference Narrow said he finds baffling.
"There is no ceiling on how many years the drug task force can apply
for the grant; it's open-ended," Narrow said. "We continue to hear
from the Department of Justice that the drug problem is not just a
problem of law enforcement; it's a medical problem and a social
problem. But their money certainly is not where their mouth is."
'A paradox of government'
Narrow said he doesn't see drug court as competing with the task force
for money.
"We need to be fighting this battle on many fronts," Narrow said.
"I've always found that a paradox of government. They say one thing
and do another."
The Byrne grant provided the adult drug court over its four-year
startup with a total of $480,000; the juvenile drug court has received
$128,000. Twenty-five percent is matched by dedicated funds the state
legislature provided. Money from other state agencies is not available
with the budget cuts the state has endured. However during the
previous budget year, Narrow said, when the legislature made the first
round of drastic cuts in its budget, drug court was the only entity
that got more money than the previous year.
"Our track record shows that it works on a very real level," he said.
"Missouri is a leader in drug courts; I'm proud of that. We have over
70 drug courts in Missouri right now."
Since 2001, 93 adults and juveniles have been through the Cape
Girardeau County drug court system.
Narrow said he will submit another application to the Justice
Department next year for family drug court. At the same time, next
July he will have to worry about where he will get funding for the two
drug courts already in place.
"We will do something," he said. "We will find enough funding
somewhere."
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