Pubdate: Sat, 21 Feb 2009 Source: Beacon Herald, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/ytFEC49J Website: http://www.stratfordbeaconherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1459 Author: Douglass St. Christian WE NEED A WAR ON THE WAR ON DRUGS I was disturbed by the recent editorial in The Beacon Herald criticizing a judge for the sentence given to the operator of small meth lab in Perth County ["Judges need to fight drug war too", Feb 16, 2009."] Since its inception the war on drugs has proven a monumental failure. While it has generated dramatic headlines, it has also given us bloated prison populations, bloated police budgets, and most importantly, bloated and growing use of dangerous drugs. In contrast, a harm reduction approach to dangerous drugs use, that is, one focused on these drugs as a health issue, has been successful wherever it has been applied. The World Health Organization, not a radical group by any definition, has embraced harm reduction, and encourages its member nations to adopt this approach to the problems of dangerous drugs in our communities. A health based approach focuses on the full range of risks and conditions which underlay all drug abuse, whether meth, or the dirty little secret of alcohol abuse, which should certainly rank as our most pressing drug problem, apart from the fact alcohol is legal. Evidence of the success of harm reduction approaches to drug abuse can be found in our own backyard, in the longstanding efforts to deal with smoking as a health issue. While we may find tactics such as the grey metal cabinets behind which cigarettes now hide a tad silly, the fact is a harm reduction approach has led to dramatic and continuing declines in tobacco use. Certainly the editorial writer is not suggesting that instead, we should start arresting convenience store owners for selling cigarettes. That is what a "war on drugs" approach would lead to. While Choices for Change is certainly right to remind us of the health, social and other costs of dangerous drug use to our communities, certainly those on the front lines of this issue would not advocate continuing a strategy which has failed by all reasonable measures. The judge in this case is to be applauded for recognizing that the best path to justice is restoration, not only of the individual in this case, but the community as a whole. Our entire community will benefit both today and in the future if we first recognize that dangerous drug use, in all its forms, is a health and a social problem and not simply a criminal one. After all, we don't expect the police to perform open heart surgery, do we? So why pass along other equally real and devastating health issues for them to solve? Douglass St. Christian Stratford - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin