Pubdate: Tue, 17 Aug 1999 Date: 08/17/1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Author: G. Alan Robison Gen. Barry McCaffrey's article ("ABCs of drugs should be a part of school curriculum," Outlook Aug. 11) indicated that he is slowly but surely beginning to understand the situation with illegal drugs in this country. It should, nevertheless, be noted that the general talks a much better game than he plays. Whether the fault of the politicians who control his budget or his own, he continues to devote over two-thirds of his $17 billion budget to protocols we know don't work, such as crop eradication, interdiction and long prison sentences for drug use and sale. Less than one third of his budget goes to the sensible programs he wrote about. The root cause of our country's drug problem is drug prohibition, which has now let to the biggest black market in drugs the world has ever seen. We must end drug prohibition and replace it with an effective regulatory policy that would keep dangerous and addicting drugs out of the hands of children and make the currently illegal drugs at least as hard for kids to get as alcohol and tobacco. As it is now, kids can more easily get heroin and cocaine than beer, as they have been telling us for over 17 years, since the University of Michigan began taking an annual survey on drug use by teens. A useful interim step that could be taken in Houston would be to get rid of the DARE program and replace it with an educational program based on fact. If we're going to continue to make marijuana, cocaine and heroin readily available to teenagers, we should at least tell them the truth about these drugs. As the 34 heroin-related deaths in Plano during the past three years have made clear, it's sometimes true that what people don't know can kill them. G. Alan Robison, Executive director, Drug Policy Forum of Texas