Pubdate: Thu, 25 Mar 1999 Date: 03/25/1999 Source: Bergen Record (NJ) Author: Wally Jeffs Closter Phyllis Nuber of River Edge suffered every parent's worst nightmare ("Legalizing drugs is not the answer," Your Views, March 5), and I offer her my sincere sympathy. It's this very circumstance, however, that should compel her to shout the loudest for legalizing drugs. With legalization would come regulation, probably under the auspices of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF), with methods borrowed perhaps from traffic, gambling, and prostitution regulators. The methadone model would serve to preclude overdose, manufacture would be overseen by Food and Drug Administration watchdogs, and rehab facilities with clean needles would be available. If all of this sounds coddling or too left-wing liberal, consider that we are all living the alternative, and it has never worked. We are still learning the lesson of Prohibition - crime pays - and the cost is astronomical. We all know this. There are qualified people to treat those in need, and their arsenal contains none of the following: handcuffs, guns, black robes, cell keys, and cattle prods. When we finally learn that addiction, like alcoholism, is a medical condition, not simply a breakdown of discipline, then we can rework our system and turn a giant tax drain into a tax contributor. Wally Jeffs Closter, March 11