News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Judge Says Drug Courts Worth Investment |
Title: | US MO: Judge Says Drug Courts Worth Investment |
Published On: | 2003-10-14 |
Source: | The Southeast Missourian (MO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 08:57:00 |
JUDGE SAYS DRUG COURTS WORTH INVESTMENT
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- State Supreme Court Judge William Ray Price Jr. told
a panel of lawmakers and judges on Tuesday that an increased investment in
special drug courts would save the state money in the long run by keeping
more offenders out of prison.
Drug courts were founded in St. Louis and Kansas City in the early 1990s
and today are functioning in 35 of Missouri's 45 judicial circuits.
The program's goal is to help drug offenders turn their lives around by
undergoing substance-abuse treatment and submitting to intense court
supervision. Those completing the program, which generally takes a year,
can avoid prison.
Price called illegal drug use the "single greatest factor" contributing to
crime nationally. However, he said locking up offenders is expensive and
doesn't improve their behavior.
"We do a far better job of keeping people on the straight and narrow path
than prison," Price said of drug courts.
Committee Appearance
The judge made his comments before the Joint Interim Committee on Judicial
Resources, which is studying how to continue funding vital court operations
amid state budget cuts.
The state budget includes $3.3 million for drug courts -- about half of
what had been requested for the current fiscal year. State money accounts
for two-thirds of drug-court funding, with the federal government providing
the remainder. Jurisdictions with drug courts, to varying degrees, also
receive some local funding.
As drug courts become more popular, additional funding will be required,
Price said. However, he called the success of drug courts worth the investment.
It costs $3,000 to $5,000 a year to send one person through the program,
far less than the $13,000 a year in direct costs to the taxpayer for
housing one inmate.
Factoring in the cost of building and maintaining new prisons, the actual
expense of incarceration is much higher. Price said one national study put
the annual cost at $50,000 per inmate.
While saving money is a positive side effect, Price said the real benefit
is a reduction in recidivism.
Of those who have graduated from drug court, only 10 percent offend again.
Among those who spend time in prison, the recidivism rate is 45 percent.
Because of the strict requirements imposed on drug-court participants, only
50 percent graduate.
"If they graduate, their odds of making it are very good," Price said.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- State Supreme Court Judge William Ray Price Jr. told
a panel of lawmakers and judges on Tuesday that an increased investment in
special drug courts would save the state money in the long run by keeping
more offenders out of prison.
Drug courts were founded in St. Louis and Kansas City in the early 1990s
and today are functioning in 35 of Missouri's 45 judicial circuits.
The program's goal is to help drug offenders turn their lives around by
undergoing substance-abuse treatment and submitting to intense court
supervision. Those completing the program, which generally takes a year,
can avoid prison.
Price called illegal drug use the "single greatest factor" contributing to
crime nationally. However, he said locking up offenders is expensive and
doesn't improve their behavior.
"We do a far better job of keeping people on the straight and narrow path
than prison," Price said of drug courts.
Committee Appearance
The judge made his comments before the Joint Interim Committee on Judicial
Resources, which is studying how to continue funding vital court operations
amid state budget cuts.
The state budget includes $3.3 million for drug courts -- about half of
what had been requested for the current fiscal year. State money accounts
for two-thirds of drug-court funding, with the federal government providing
the remainder. Jurisdictions with drug courts, to varying degrees, also
receive some local funding.
As drug courts become more popular, additional funding will be required,
Price said. However, he called the success of drug courts worth the investment.
It costs $3,000 to $5,000 a year to send one person through the program,
far less than the $13,000 a year in direct costs to the taxpayer for
housing one inmate.
Factoring in the cost of building and maintaining new prisons, the actual
expense of incarceration is much higher. Price said one national study put
the annual cost at $50,000 per inmate.
While saving money is a positive side effect, Price said the real benefit
is a reduction in recidivism.
Of those who have graduated from drug court, only 10 percent offend again.
Among those who spend time in prison, the recidivism rate is 45 percent.
Because of the strict requirements imposed on drug-court participants, only
50 percent graduate.
"If they graduate, their odds of making it are very good," Price said.
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