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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: OPED: What Help Is Available For Other Addicts?
Title:US MO: OPED: What Help Is Available For Other Addicts?
Published On:2002-09-17
Source:St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO)
Fetched On:2008-01-22 01:27:50
WHAT HELP IS AVAILABLE FOR OTHER ADDICTS?

Washington - Drugs

Comedians have the drug hungers of Noelle Bush, daughter of Florida Gov.
Jeb Bush and niece of the nation's president, George W. Bush, to kick
around some more. But let's get serious for a moment.

Noelle, 25, needs help. She was found with crack cocaine in her shoe last
Monday night at a drug treatment center in Orlando where she was in a
court-ordered drug rehabilitation program.

You know somebody has a S-E-R-I-O-U-S drug problem when they get caught
with illicit drugs while in rehab.

But we already knew Noelle's problem was serious when she spent three days
in jail back in July for contempt of court after she was found with
prescription pills that did not belong to her. They belonged to a treatment
center worker, according to news reports, and had been taken from a cabinet.

Noelle Bush was assigned to the treatment facility in January after she was
arrested on charges of trying to obtain Xanax, an anti-anxiety drug, with a
fraudulent prescription at a Tallahassee pharmacy.

Her father showed the proper attitude for a parent in such circumstances,
which is compassion. "This is a private issue as it relates to my daughter
and myself and my wife," he said. "The road to recovery is a rocky one for
a lot of people that have this kind of problem."

The governor's pun ("rock" is common street slang for crack cocaine) was
unintended, yet ironically appropriate. The road to recovery is uphill and
slippery, and loaded with backslides for many of those who take it.

The tragedy is that there are thousands of other Noelles out there whose
fathers and families are not well-off or well-connected, and they don't
have the opportunity to stay in nice treatment centers.

Instead, they spend nights in jail.

Gov. Bush and his wife wisely requested that their daughter be referred to
one of the best drug treatment centers in their state. But the governor has
reduced state funding for drug treatment programs, which, like those in
every other state, have waiting lists of drug abusers seeking help.

And he says he opposes a treatment-instead-of-incarceration initiative that
proponents expect to put on the Florida ballot in 2004.

A similar reform measure passed in California in 2000. New ones will appear
on this November's ballot in Ohio and the District of Columbia.

In California, for example, drug abusers have to be sent to treatment after
their first two arrests, if they are not involved in other criminal
activity. Those who fail while in treatment, as Noelle did, must be offered
an alternative form of treatment, not jail. California's measure also
doubled state funding for treatment to reduce the waiting lists. Ohio's
measure calls for a similar increase in drug treatment funding.

As Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the New York-based Drug Policy
Alliance, which backs such treatment-alternative measures, said, "Noelle
has a problem with drugs. What she needs is help. If one form of treatment
does not work, the answer is not prison, but to try another form of
treatment, and if that doesn't work, then another form again. Think about
this as a medical problem, or a psychological problem. No one 'treatment'
approach works for everyone."

Indeed, unless the Noelles out there actually harm others or put others at
great risk, such as by driving under the influence of drugs, we should be
able to do better than prison.

Our hearts should go out to Noelle Bush, but we should not stop there.
Nonviolent drug abusers don't need jail; they need help. Our war on drugs
need not be a war on the victims.
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