Newsletter Archive

    NEW DRUG CZAR SAYS WAR ON DRUGS A NATIONAL HEALTH ISSUE PDF Print E-mail
    User Rating: / 0
    PoorBest 
    Press - press
    Written by Webster, Peter   
    Tuesday, 26 May 2009 00:00

    Pubdate: Tue, 26 May 2009
    Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR)
    Copyright: 2009 The Oregonian
    Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
    Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/
    Author: Kimberly A.C. Wilson, The Oregonian Staff

    NEW DRUG CZAR SAYS WAR ON DRUGS A NATIONAL HEALTH ISSUE

    Seattle's Police Chief, Gil Kerlikowske, Will Direct the White House
    on Its National Drug Policy

    SEATTLE -- During nearly a decade as Seattle's top law enforcement
    officer Gil Kerlikowske was confronted with concerns about corner
    drug dealing almost daily.

    "I would meet with community folks and they would say 'about two
    blocks from here,' or 'over in Belltown near where I live,' or 'down
    the street from my house, there's people selling drugs on the corner
    at all hours.' "

    Kerlikowske's response as chief was playbook police work -- deploying
    officers to the scene, arresting players along the illegal drug trade
    food-chain and seizing territorial, if temporary, victory on the drug corners.

    But a week into his new assignment as President Barack Obama's drug
    czar, Kerlikowske is using the platform to recast the "War on Drugs"
    as a matter of national public health and not simply the domain of
    the criminal justice system.

    "I'd be happy if I can change the conversation about drugs. We
    recycle people through the criminal justice system but it's more than
    that," Kerlikowske said Thursday during a visit to Seattle before
    wrapping up his move to Washington, D.C., to direct the White House
    Office of National Drug Control Policy.

    He sat in a small meeting room at the Four Seasons Hotel that
    overlooked ferry traffic in Puget Sound on a cloud-free afternoon.
    Two weeks earlier, the interview might have taken place under those
    blue skies, checking out a nearby drug corner or dropping by one of
    the city's needle-exchange sites.

    But new constraints -- including advance teams and a cadre of U.S.
    Marshals -- come along with his new leadership role within the
    Executive Office of the President. So instead a deluxe setting served
    as the backdrop for a one-on-one conversation with The Oregonian on
    the linguistics of the war, the ravages of addiction and the social
    cost of drug incarceration.

    The office may only be 20 years old, but the war it has waged was
    declared four decades ago, when President Richard Nixon outlined the
    federal government's illegal drug prohibition campaign.

    "Pill Mills" in Florida

    No one claims the war has been won. While fewer high school seniors
    say they've been offered marijuana or amphetamines than they were a
    generation ago, nearly 2 million people are arrested every year for
    nonviolent drug offenses.

    And abuse of steroids and designer drugs has mushroomed, as have
    "pill mills" like the ones Kerlikowske visited in South Florida --
    storefront, walk-in facilities that dispense millions of addictive
    prescription pain medications to people who flood in from other
    states. Think OxyContin for out-of-towners, or Vicodin for visitors.

    To combat the problem, Kerlikowske said he will push all states to
    adopt the sort of prescription-monitoring databases already in place
    in 30 states, including Oregon and Washington, where police,
    pharmacists and physicians can track prescriptions for addictive drugs.

    Without a national system to monitor abuse, "the cost to society," he
    said, "is huge."

    A statistic that haunts the new "drug czar" may come as a surprise:
    more people in the United States die from pharmaceutical and illegal
    drugs than from gunshot wounds.

    "In the past few weeks, we've had three deaths from swine flu or the
    H1N1 virus, and, in the same period, we've had thousands of people
    overdose and die," he said. "This a public health issue."

    Police Background

    Kerlikowske, the sixth drug czar since the position was established
    in 1989, is only the second to come from a background in law
    enforcement. That perspective -- rooted in jobs as police chief in
    Buffalo and coastal Florida cities -- was honed over nine years in Seattle.

    But missed opportunities in Seattle also may shape Kerlikowske's
    focus as federal drug policy chief. Take needle-exchange programs, for example.

    Although the Obama administration's 2010 budget does not lift the ban
    on federally-funded needle exchanges, as a candidate, Obama strongly
    favored such efforts, and Kerlikowske said he supports law
    enforcement officials working alongside treatment providers to solve
    drug issues.

    "I think needle exchanges can be part of a larger health care issue.
    Police chiefs know judges and prosecutors, but I don't think they're
    shoulder-to-shoulder with the treatment community," he said.
    Kerlikowske said he admits he didn't foster such relationships with
    service providers in Seattle, including the city's needle exchange
    near Pike Place Market.

    "We have a chance now to forge relationships with our treatment
    colleagues," he said. "You can increase the impact because you're
    collaborating."

    Will Soon Talk Policies

    Kerlikowske expects to meet soon with Attorney General Eric Holder to
    talk drug policies. Matters of special interest to the Pacific
    Northwest are high on the agenda, he said, including medical
    marijuana and the scourge of methamphetamines.

    He is keeping in mind the words of fellow West Coast police chiefs,
    who were raising red flags about meth long before federal officials
    began to listen.

    "It wasn't being heard," he said. "We're gonna be a lot faster to
    look at things on a regional basis. Meth is one thing. Medical
    marijuana is another."

    In Seattle, Kerlikowske followed but didn't embrace city direction to
    ignore medical marijuana crimes.

    Still, if pot legalization supporters haven't exactly found a vocal
    ally in Kerlikowske, advocates for medical marijuana -- on the books
    in 13 states -- may be pleased with his track record.

    "Whether it's the Drug Enforcement Agency or the Seattle Police
    Department, you use your resources to go after the most violent
    offenders," Kerlikowske said.

    "Medical marijuana doesn't pose that threat."
    __________________________________________________________________________
    Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
    receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
    ---
    MAP posted-by: Richard Lake


    _______________________________________________
    Theharderstuff mailing list
    This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
    http://mail.psychedelic-library.org/mailman/listinfo/theharderstuff