June 13, 2005 |
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Fathers
Day: Dads Reunite with their Children
after Years of Painful Separation
Proposition
36, Californias Treatment instead
of Incarceration Initiative, Helps
People End the Cycle of Addiction
and Reclaim their Lives
Fathers whose Lives Have Been Changed
by Prop. 36, Available for Interviews
(See Bios Below)
|
Contact: Tony Newman
(646) 335-5384 or Glenn Backes (916)
202-2538 |
Addiction destroys
families, making holidays like Fathers
Day anything but a celebration for parents
who have substance abuse problems and the
children who love them. But since the passage
of Californias landmark treatment
instead of incarceration initiative, Proposition
36, thousands of families have been reunited
as parents have broken the cycle of addiction.
As the four year anniversary of Proposition
36 approaches this July 1, the human impact
of the groundbreaking law is being seen
all around California.
Graduates of the program
are speaking out about how the voters'
approval of the treatment-not-incarceration
law led directly to positive changes in
their own lives. Inspired by their own
experiences, many graduates are going
back to the treatment centers that helped
them, sharing their stories in order to
inspire other clients to succeed. Others
have become substance abuse counselors
themselves.
With three bills now
pending in the Legislature that would
affect Proposition 36, the voices of these
graduates are increasingly important.
Without Prop. 36, the only thing
that would have gotten me off drugs would
have been an overdose, said William
Evans, a veteran who picked up his 20
year addiction to methamphetamine while
in the Navy.
Californias landmark
Proposition 36 initiative, passed by an
overwhelming majority of the states
voters in 2000, has helped tens of thousands
of non-violent drug offenders to get access
to treatment for the first time. Despite
the popular initiatives clear winsboth
economic and social vested interests
that benefit from skyrocketing incarceration
rates have continued to fight the proposition.
A bill drafted by prosecutors, narcotics
cops and a judge who opposed Prop 36,
and introduced by Senator Denise Ducheny
of San Diego, would radically overhaul
Prop. 36 by jailing drug addicts who are
currently being treated as a result of
that initiative.
The voters gave
us treatment instead of incarceration,
and only the voters can take it away,
said Glenn Backes of Drug Policy Alliance,
If cops and politicians try to lock
up nonviolent drug users instead of providing
treatment, then we will stand with the
families of Prop. 36 graduates to defend
them in Sacramento and in the courts,
if need be.
The graduates profiled
below are all available for interviews,
please contact Tony Newman at (646) 335-5384.
William, Los Angeles,
51
William had been to jail
before, but it had never helped him kick
the 20 year methamphetamine addiction
he picked up while he was in the Navy.
The last time he was in court, he thought
they would send him back behind bars,
but they offered him treatment through
Prop. 36. He took the treatment option,
and after two years clean and sober, he
says that without Prop. 36, the only thing
that would have gotten him off of drugs
would have been an overdose. Bill credits
Prop. 36 with giving him a second chance
at marriage and at raising his children.
Bill is now a repair maintenance worker
for commercial buildings. He is happy
to have a bank account, a car and a family.
He believes Prop. 36 and lots of prayer
helped him find his way.
Gary, Riverside, 49
Gary used drugs for 30
years before he was able to turn his life
around. He had lost job after job, as
well as his home, and was living in a
tent in a canyon when he was picked up
on possession charges and offered the
choice between years in prison and treatment
through Prop 36. Gary was 47 when he entered
treatment for the first time in his life.
It was a life or death situation
for me, he said, if I went
back to drugs again I would not have made
it. After completing an outpatient
program, he was able to move in with his
daughter and meet his grandchildren for
the first time. Gary has two granddaughters
who are ages four and seven and a new
eight month old baby grandson who he is
able to see all the time. He graduated
from Prop 36 in February of 2003, and
he now has his driver's license, owns
two vehicles, has a job and rents an apartment.
He just received a promotion to become
a manager at an Auto Repair Shop. He continues
to attend the 12 step program that provided
him with support after he finished his
residential treatment, and now leads sessions
there.
Paul, Sacramento,
42
Paul has been clean and
sober for three years, since he entered
treatment under Proposition 36 on May
19th, 2002. He had struggled with drugs
since he was 17, and had bounced in and
out of jail and prison throughout his
life, but his stints behind bars never
stopped his addictionin fact sometimes
they made it worse. Drugs are in
every prison, he said. And
since I wanted them, they were easy to
find. He had also tried treatment
before, but it had never worked for him.
But when he entered Prop. 36, he was finally
ready for a change. Prop 36 made
the critical difference because the counselors
and probation officers really worked with
me. Even though I never relapsed, I felt
comforted knowing that there was support
to fall back on if I did struggle and
that they would not send me straight back
to jail, Paul said. After graduating
from his Prop. 36 program, Paul returned
often to the treatment center that had
helped him to speak as an alumnus. Because
of his efforts, his program began an alumni
program where graduates speak to people
entering the program about their experiences.
Paul is now closer to his teenage children
than he has ever been before, and he volunteers
to raise money for their high school.
He is also very active in his own community,
and recently built a fence for a neighbor:
he is trying to make up for lost time.
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