April 18, 2005 |
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Tomorrow Senate
Committee Hearing: San Diego Senator
Proposes to Gut Voter-Approved Treatment
instead of Incarceration Initiative
(Prop. 36)
|
Contact: Glenn
Backes (916) 202-253 or Simeon Gant
(916) 202-1636 |
SACRAMENTO- In 2000,
Californians voted overwhelmingly to reform
their criminal justice system by enacting
Proposition 36, the initiative requiring
that people be offered the option of drug
treatment instead of incarceration for their
first two non-violent drug possession offenses.
According to California Department of Corrections
data, since Prop. 36s inception, there
are 7,337 fewer prisoners incarcerated for
drug possession in Californias overloaded
prison system.
Tomorrow, Tuesday April
19th, the Senate Public Safety Committee
will debate Senate Bill 803 (Ducheny);
a bill proposing to gut the core components
of Proposition 36 by allowing jail time
for first and second-time offenders.
The Drug Policy Alliance
Network (DPAN) announced its strong opposition
to SB 803 and promised to use all of its
available resources to stop any legislative
override of the voters intiaitive.
Prop. 36 does not give drug offenders
a free pass-it allows judges to sanction
clients for missed appointments or early
signs of relapse to drug use, but it does
not allow them to be jailed, said
Glenn Backes, Health Policy Director of
DPAN. California voters made it
clear that they want addiction to be treated
as a health issue instead of a criminal
justice one and Sen. Ducheny is trying
to overrule the public will.
In contrast, the Senate
Committee will also debate SB 556 (Migden),
which proposes to strengthen Prop.36,
and is supported by the California Society
of Addiction Medicine, and other addiction
experts and advocates. If passed, SB 556
will reduce the cost of probation supervision
by shortening the term of probation for
those defendants who complete drug treatment
and providing greater flexibility for
courts to order longer terms of treatment.
Backes said, SB
556 will target available Prop. 36 funds
to treatment and residential care.
A UCLA evaluation found 34.4 percent of
people who began Prop. 36 completed treatment,
approximately the same rates as other
treatment probation models including drug
courts. However, the report and other
published studies suggested that due to
funding mismanagement or shortages too
many highly addicted defendants were placed
in types of treatment that were inadequate
to help them.
Taking into account approximately
36,000 Prop. 36 clients, SB 803s
proposed 21 additional days in jail would
cost state and local government $44.3
million a year.
SB 803 will also jeopardize
public safety due to population caps on
county jails mandated by federal court
order, including Los Angeles. They
have to release an inmate for each new
person they bring through the door,
Backes explained. Those released
early will have been convicted of something
worse than personal drug use. Its
the drug war mentality all over again-wasting
money and lives on punishment while letting
more dangerous offenders go free.
Proposition 36 passed
in 2000 with 61% of the vote statewide.
A Field Poll published in 2004 found that
73% of voters said they would support
the initiative if it were on the ballot
again. Thus far, no independent evaluations
of cost savings have been published, but
the Legislative Analysts Office in 2000
projected net savings ranging from $100
million to $150 million annually and an
additional one-time cost avoidance of
$475 million and $575 million because
Prop 36 would render the building of another
prison unnecessary.
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