Source: Vancouver Sun (Canada) Section: Letter of the Day Contact: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Pubdate: Thursday 20 August 1998 Author: George Pratt ACCOUNTING FOR DRUG-CRIME COSTS The Forum page argument (The hard choices we must face, Aug. 13 ) admonishing those of us who advocate the legal dispensing of hard drugs is the same old recipe that got us into the mess we're in in the first place -- a mixture of red herring and claptrap. While the various factors set out are somewhat compelling in prompting one to urge legalization, the unmentioned major factor is to remove the need for the property crime that is overwhelming us all. It follows that the figures, wherein the cost of drugs is compared to the cost of alcohol and cigarettes, are invalid. You cannot calculate the social cost of drugs without mentioning the cost of property crime that supports the drug habit -- a figure that dwarfs all other costs put together. A hard smoker might be able to consume cigarettes to the tune of about $15 a day; a hard drinker could be flat on the floor for about $30. But a hard cocaine or heroin addict requires the support of $100 to $600 a day, money that cannot be generated by legitimate means. For the addict, the solution is simple -- the women turn to prostitution and shoplifting, the men to break and enter, flooding our city in a wave of property crime in which we are close to drowning. For us, the solution could also be simple -- legally dispense the drugs free or at cost price in a treatment centre. No more need to break into your car or home, no more need to recruit new addicts, no more profits for crime syndicates. But there are a lot of people out there in positions of influence who just don't seem to want it to happen. George Pratt, Vancouver - --- Checked-by: Rich O'Grady