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- <text id=93TT2272>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 35
- Clinton's Drug Policy Is A Bust
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Before crime became Bill Clinton's responsibility, the President's
- critique of George Bush's performance was scathing and dismissive.
- "Bush confuses being tough with being smart," Clinton told me
- during the 1992 campaign, "especially on drugs. You can't get
- serious about crime without getting serious about drugs. Bush
- thinks locking up addicts instead of treating them before they
- commit crimes--or failing to treat them once they're in prison,
- which is basically the case now--is clever politics. That
- may be, but it certainly isn't sound policy, and the consequences
- of his cravenness could ruin us."
- </p>
- <p> From that attack, Clinton wound into a passionate plea for drug
- treatment on demand. "Without it," he said, "the criminals will
- revert when they're released, and the problem will just get
- worse. Emphasizing treatment may not satisfy people fed up with
- being preyed upon, but a President should speak straight even
- if what he advocates isn't popular. If he sticks to his guns,
- the results will prove the wisdom of his policy."
- </p>
- <p> That was then. Since taking office, Clinton's passion for the
- issue has flared only once--last week, when he stomped on
- Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders for suggesting a study of the
- possibility of legalizing illicit drugs. Clinton's knee-jerk,
- anti-intellectual response, which can be fairly summarized as
- "No way, nohow; not now, not ever," is bad enough. Worse is
- his silent acceptance of policies that shortchange drug treatment,
- an abandonment of his pledge to invert the ratio of funds spent
- on drug interdiction vs. treatment, a split that continues to
- allocate $13.1 billion of federal antidrug money in favor of
- law enforcement by more than 2 to 1. It's true that "druggies
- don't vote," as a senior Administration official says, and also
- that the President is fearful of appearing soft on crime, but
- he had it right during the campaign: drug treatment does the
- job.
- </p>
- <p> A few facts: despite the spending of more than $100 billion
- on the drug war since 1981, drugs remain readily available.
- Interdiction efforts are a farce. In fact, worldwide gluts and
- America's porous borders have caused cocaine and heroin prices
- to decline dramatically--and heroin use, which seemed to be
- dying out, is rising precipitously. Casual drug use is down,
- but at least 2 million Americans remain hard-core consumers.
- At least 60% of violent crime is associated with drug use. Addicts
- commit 15 times as many robberies and 20 times as many burglaries
- as criminals not on drugs. Approximately 70% of the nation's
- 1.4 million prisoners have drug problems, but only 1% of federal
- inmates and about 15% of state prisoners receive adequate treatment.
- Yet well-structured, prison-based antidrug programs have produced
- remarkable results. The rearrest rate for those who endure yearlong
- therapeutic programs is about one-third the rate for those who
- don't participate. And in-prison treatment is a bargain: it
- costs $28,000 a year to house one inmate, but adding comprehensive
- drug treatment costs only about $3,000 annually per prisoner.
- </p>
- <p> Thanks primarily to Representative Charles Schumer and Senator
- John Kerry, prison treatment may finally expand. If the treatment
- funds authorized in the pending crime bill survive, by 1998
- almost all federal prisoners and approximately half of state
- inmates could receive intensive treatment during their incarceration.
- "But then when they're out, there's nothing planned in the way
- of significant funds to continue their treatment," says Mitchell
- Rosenthal of New York's Phoenix House, "and without ample follow-through
- outside, much of the work inside will be wasted."
- </p>
- <p> Outside, the situation is deplorable. At present there are only
- about 12,000 long-term, residential drug-treatment beds available
- in the U.S. The irony is obvious: without an increase in drug
- treatment outside the criminal-justice system, most addicts
- will have to commit a crime before being helped. The cost of
- community-based residential treatment ($18,000 annually a participant)
- is still less than the cost of housing a prisoner, but "it's
- going to take clear presidential leadership for people to realize
- how cost-effective that can be," says Schumer. The signs are
- not encouraging. Widespread drug treatment will have to wait
- for health-care reform, says the White House, but the desire
- to keep the package's overall cost down has already caused a
- cutback in the planned coverage. As currently contemplated,
- says Rosenthal, "the treatment the Administration is proposing
- will be almost useless in helping the hard-core user kick his
- habit."
- </p>
- <p> If Clinton "won't seriously fund treatment because of budget
- constraints," says Kerry, "he should invoke the national emergency
- provision that would allow us to fund what's needed off-budget.
- It's simply unacceptable--and counterproductive--to plead
- poverty on this. Doing it only halfway won't get the job done,
- and it will erode support for what we actually do."
- </p>
- <p> What's needed is a strong and coherent drug strategy that focuses
- on treatment more than punishment, and Clinton knows it. "If
- I've fallen short this year," the President recently told Rolling
- Stone, it's in [the creation of] prevention programs." Clinton
- needs to recall and act on his earlier words. If he doesn't,
- the latest war on crime will probably be no more successful
- than its predecessors, and some future presidential candidate
- will echo Clinton on Bush. What the President said as a candidate
- is true: you can't get serious about crime without getting serious
- about drugs.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-