October 20, 2014

Good Stuff: Seattle's approach to drugs

ACLU - Seattle is trying something different.

Since 2012, the city's Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion program cuts out the criminal justice middleman. Instead of jailing people struggling with addiction, officers connect people directly with the treatment and services that can actually help them get sober.

Instead of wasting time and money with a court hearing and saddling people with a criminal record before they can access treatment and services, LEAD doesn't waste time. And unlike drug courts, LEAD participants who relapse are not threatened with jail time and expulsion from the program.

For decades, this country has been waging a failed war on drugs. Drug use hasn't gone down. Drugs are just as available as they used to be. Instead of solving our drug problem, we've become a society that seemingly disregards millions of lives – particularly the lives of black and brown people.

Although the majority of people who use and deliver drugs in Seattle are white, the black drug arrest rate was 13 times higher than the white drug arrest rate in 2006. Aggressive over-policing has ravaged communities. Large swaths of the population have been locked up. And billions of dollars have been wasted that could have been much better spent on interventions that could have actually changed the course of people's lives.

Drug addiction has become one of the many social problems that we've relegated to the criminal justice system. But as with homelessness and mental illness, handcuffs and jail cells haven't made things better and have cost much more than the treatment and services that can. It doesn't have to be this way. America can safely reduce our reliance on incarceration. Several states have reduced their prison populations while crime rates have dropped.

Addiction should not be a crime.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Easy to agree with the ACLU on this, other than the over-broad determination that somehow "we" are responsible for situating the WOD in the criminal justice system. The WOD was first a political formula designed to blunt youthful opposition to the establishment and to toss red meat to a reactionary conservative base. It later morphed into an attack on the integrity of minority neighbourhoods, in conjunction with a burgeoning military-industrial-security-prison complex. This described complex was always deeply complicit in drug trafficking itself, as Nixon's program was introduced during an influx of SouthEast Asian heroin enabled by the Vietnam War.