News (Media Awareness Project) - US MS: Editorial: Drug Courts Are Budget Helpers |
Title: | US MS: Editorial: Drug Courts Are Budget Helpers |
Published On: | 2003-12-15 |
Source: | Greenwood Commonwealth (MS) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 03:18:55 |
DRUG COURTS ARE BUDGET HELPERS
State's financial troubles should be alternative sentencing on the front
burner, not back.
Implementing drug courts statewide in Mississippi should not be an idea
that's put on the back burner until the state's coffers are replenished.
They should be pursued precisely as a way to address the sluggish revenue
stream.
Drug courts are a sensible, cost-effective way to deal with offenders whose
addiction drove them to steal or commit other nonviolent crimes.
Drug courts are much cheaper than incarceration. It costs approximately
$17,000 annually to house an inmate, compared to $1,500 to $2,000 for a
person to complete a drug court program, says Keith Starrett, the Southwest
Mississippi circuit court judge who pioneered the experiment in Mississippi.
Plus, drug courts have a better chance of rehabilitating offenders than
does prison. Those who participate in drug courts are required to get
counseling and regular drug screening. They are able to work, which allows
them to make restitution to the victims of their crimes, to help pay for
their treatment and to provide for their own families. They have to
regularly report on their progress to the courts. If they fail to toe the
line, off they go to prison.
Mississippi lawmakers, when they arrive in Jackson next month, will resume
their ongoing struggle with the state's tight finances. A significant part
of the pinch is caused by the steeply rising costs of lawmakers'
incarceration-heavy mentality. When a poor state like Mississippi locks up
an inordinately high percentage of its citizens, other priorities such as
education, health care and transportation suffer.
There are presently nine drug courts operating in Mississippi, including
one that includes Leflore County. Four more are planned. The Legislature
this year authorized drug courts statewide, but it didn't put any new money
into the legislation to make their creation a reality.
The delay is fiscally foolish. Drug courts make as much sense in tough
financial times as in good.
State's financial troubles should be alternative sentencing on the front
burner, not back.
Implementing drug courts statewide in Mississippi should not be an idea
that's put on the back burner until the state's coffers are replenished.
They should be pursued precisely as a way to address the sluggish revenue
stream.
Drug courts are a sensible, cost-effective way to deal with offenders whose
addiction drove them to steal or commit other nonviolent crimes.
Drug courts are much cheaper than incarceration. It costs approximately
$17,000 annually to house an inmate, compared to $1,500 to $2,000 for a
person to complete a drug court program, says Keith Starrett, the Southwest
Mississippi circuit court judge who pioneered the experiment in Mississippi.
Plus, drug courts have a better chance of rehabilitating offenders than
does prison. Those who participate in drug courts are required to get
counseling and regular drug screening. They are able to work, which allows
them to make restitution to the victims of their crimes, to help pay for
their treatment and to provide for their own families. They have to
regularly report on their progress to the courts. If they fail to toe the
line, off they go to prison.
Mississippi lawmakers, when they arrive in Jackson next month, will resume
their ongoing struggle with the state's tight finances. A significant part
of the pinch is caused by the steeply rising costs of lawmakers'
incarceration-heavy mentality. When a poor state like Mississippi locks up
an inordinately high percentage of its citizens, other priorities such as
education, health care and transportation suffer.
There are presently nine drug courts operating in Mississippi, including
one that includes Leflore County. Four more are planned. The Legislature
this year authorized drug courts statewide, but it didn't put any new money
into the legislation to make their creation a reality.
The delay is fiscally foolish. Drug courts make as much sense in tough
financial times as in good.
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