Pubdate: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2002 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Authors: Shirley Hawkesworth, George Crolius and Michael Cohen DON'T CUT PUBLIC DRUG-TREATMENT PROGRAMS The headline on the Jan. 27 article Florida slashing care for addicts was as predictable as rain in the springtime. It is not possible to have massive tax cuts without cutting needed services. Drug treatment works. Drug court works. Drug programs in prisons work. I have been involved with programs that work since 1975 -- for many years at Spectrum Programs and for the last six years at Victim Services Center. I have seen many miracles in lives saved and lives lived at a much more productive level. Drug treatment is cost effective. Every addict who stops using becomes a better mother, father, employee. They become producers instead of users of services. We will all pay the price for these cuts. SHIRLEY HAWKESWORTH Opa-locka ~~~~~~~~ I was appalled to learn that the Florida Department of Corrections, apparently under pressure to make significant budget cuts, chose the area we can least afford -- the state's drug-treatment programs. Certainly department officials must know that curtailing treatment for offenders with drug histories will only mean sending them back to our communities to continue their criminal ways. Law-abiding residents will be the losers. While reporter Carol Marbin Miller's story provided telling statistics, probably the most significant was the belief that as much as 70 percent of inmates are in for drug-related crimes like burglary or robbery though perhaps not directly charged with drug offenses. It's a matter of record that treatment programs work for a great number of addicts who surrender to them. The department's action is not only ``foolish,'' as Drug Court Judge Rosinek said. It's irresponsible. GEORGE CROLIUS Deerfield Beach ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Reading Sunday's article describing how the Florida Legislature voted to cripple public substance-abuse rehabilitation programs was disappointing. There are hard statistics, developed over the past two decades, showing that every dollar spent on drug treatment, drug courts and jail programs will save five-to seven-fold that amount in lower crime and medical costs (about 70 percent of emergency-room admissions are drug or alcohol related). Even more important than the financial considerations, however, is the callousness displayed by the Legislature in condemning the addicts, their families and society as a whole to live with the devastating effects of this treatable illness. Unfortunately, drug addiction and alcoholism carry their own stigma and do not have the appeal of treatment of other diseases, so the chance of an outcry by the voters is small. Likewise, the action of the legislators will not necessarily come back to personally affect them. It will be the public at large that is forced to reap the whirlwind the lawmakers have sown. MICHAEL COHEN Surfside - --- MAP posted-by: manny lovitto