News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: PUB LTE: Don't Cut Drug Treatment |
Title: | US FL: PUB LTE: Don't Cut Drug Treatment |
Published On: | 2002-02-07 |
Source: | Gainesville Sun, The (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 21:52:30 |
DON'T CUT DRUG TREATMENT
The Sun's editorial of January 30 regarding reduced funding for prisoners'
drug treatment is, in my view, a call for reason in times of rash and hasty
policy making on the part of our Legislature.
Those who are unaware of the facts surrounding the current and proposed
future cuts might assume (erroneously) that it is the Florida Department of
Corrections that is making these cuts. The fact is, the Legislature already
cut these funds in the December special session.
The immediate impact on this area that includes Alachua, Gilchrist,
Bradford, Dixie, Lafayette, Union and Marion counties was to cause the loss
of more than 70 private sector jobs. These were professional
substance-abuse counselors and support staff that were employed by a number
of companies and/or agencies to service long-term Department of Corrections
contracts for these substance-abuse services.
If the loss of 70-plus jobs and the resulting serious personal and
financial impacts were the only negative outcomes from all of this, it
should have caused significant alarm to this community. The fact is, the
total synergistic negative impact of these prison substance-abuse program
cuts will not be fully realized or felt for many months - long after the
current Legislative session is over and the 2002-2003 fiscal budget is in
place.
Florida refers to the state prison system as "Department of Corrections."
What is to correct with the loss of educational, vocational and
substance-abuse treatment programs? With court and prison commitment
statistics indicating that a full 29 percent of all prison incarcerations
are for drug-or alcohol-related crimes, it is undeniable that the root
cause of this criminality is caused by addiction, alcoholism and chemical
dependency. Other criminal justice sources suggest that the proximate cause
of between 82 percent and 87 percent of all felony crimes, especially
property crimes such as burglary and theft, is attributable to substance abuse.
Prisoners are serving longer and longer sentences, in part due to public
sentiment, and changes in law and public policy. The opportunity to impact
this incarcerated population with effective treatment is best accomplished
while the offender is in custody and presumably drug-free.
Offenders who enter prison with a chemical-dependency problem that is left
untreated are destined to return to their addictive behaviors, and
eventually will return to prison. It has been estimated that an active
drug-dependent offender commits two to three felony property crimes daily
to support their habit.
Statistics have repeatedly and consistently proven that substance-abuse
programs in prison produce significant and cost-effective reductions in
recidivism. It is substantially more cost-effective to treat a drug
offender while in prison and return the offender to society drug-free than
it is to allow the "revolving-door" syndrome to create repeat felony
offenders who become institutionalized.
The net result of this policy is that the citizens of Florida assume the
cost and burden of supporting the offenders' dependents, as well as the
offenders' long-term incarceration.
PAUL H. BROWN, Melrose
The Sun's editorial of January 30 regarding reduced funding for prisoners'
drug treatment is, in my view, a call for reason in times of rash and hasty
policy making on the part of our Legislature.
Those who are unaware of the facts surrounding the current and proposed
future cuts might assume (erroneously) that it is the Florida Department of
Corrections that is making these cuts. The fact is, the Legislature already
cut these funds in the December special session.
The immediate impact on this area that includes Alachua, Gilchrist,
Bradford, Dixie, Lafayette, Union and Marion counties was to cause the loss
of more than 70 private sector jobs. These were professional
substance-abuse counselors and support staff that were employed by a number
of companies and/or agencies to service long-term Department of Corrections
contracts for these substance-abuse services.
If the loss of 70-plus jobs and the resulting serious personal and
financial impacts were the only negative outcomes from all of this, it
should have caused significant alarm to this community. The fact is, the
total synergistic negative impact of these prison substance-abuse program
cuts will not be fully realized or felt for many months - long after the
current Legislative session is over and the 2002-2003 fiscal budget is in
place.
Florida refers to the state prison system as "Department of Corrections."
What is to correct with the loss of educational, vocational and
substance-abuse treatment programs? With court and prison commitment
statistics indicating that a full 29 percent of all prison incarcerations
are for drug-or alcohol-related crimes, it is undeniable that the root
cause of this criminality is caused by addiction, alcoholism and chemical
dependency. Other criminal justice sources suggest that the proximate cause
of between 82 percent and 87 percent of all felony crimes, especially
property crimes such as burglary and theft, is attributable to substance abuse.
Prisoners are serving longer and longer sentences, in part due to public
sentiment, and changes in law and public policy. The opportunity to impact
this incarcerated population with effective treatment is best accomplished
while the offender is in custody and presumably drug-free.
Offenders who enter prison with a chemical-dependency problem that is left
untreated are destined to return to their addictive behaviors, and
eventually will return to prison. It has been estimated that an active
drug-dependent offender commits two to three felony property crimes daily
to support their habit.
Statistics have repeatedly and consistently proven that substance-abuse
programs in prison produce significant and cost-effective reductions in
recidivism. It is substantially more cost-effective to treat a drug
offender while in prison and return the offender to society drug-free than
it is to allow the "revolving-door" syndrome to create repeat felony
offenders who become institutionalized.
The net result of this policy is that the citizens of Florida assume the
cost and burden of supporting the offenders' dependents, as well as the
offenders' long-term incarceration.
PAUL H. BROWN, Melrose
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