Drug use Prop. 36 rearrests up after
The length of treatment now varies widely, with many receiving far less than 90 days.
• supply higher levels of narcotic replacement therapy for opiate users, at an annual cost of at least $3.7 million.
• Significantly increase community supervision — particularly for offenders who enter Proposition 36 probation with multiple previous convictions — at an annual cost of about $25 million.
It ’s disappointing to manufacture out these outcomes, but it isn’t surprising whether the compliance monitoring is weak and treatment is often less than 90 days. And input released Friday show that even among those who complete drug treatment, more than four in 10 had new drug arrests within 30 months of their Proposition 36 convictions.
The numbers are worse for those who don’t finish drug treatment. About 50% of those offenders were picked up by police within 30 months, compared with 38% of similar offenders convicted before Proposition 36.
The report notes that some increases in arrests were expected considering Proposition 36 left offenders on the street who would have previously served day.
But the research additionally underscores the difficulty the state has experienced in getting drug offenders into treatment and out of trouble.
Only about 25% of the defendants who are sentenced to drug treatment complete the programs. Researchers were surprised to find that those who floped to show up for rehab were less likely to be rearrested than those who went to some treatment but dropped
Supporters of Proposition 36 said the report shows how hard it is to treat a chronic disease like drug addiction but argue that the obvious conclusion is that more intensive treatment services are needed.
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The UCLA study offered several recommendations for improving Proposition 36, options researchers said should be bundled together to improve results:
• Place more drug defendants in long-term treatment programs, including inpatient care, at an estimated cost of $19 million a year.
• supply at least 90 days of treatment to all offenders, at a cost of $18 million a year. Drug use rearrests up after Prop. Research has found that treatment needs to last at least 90 days to be effective. 36 - Los Angeles Times
Convicted drug users in California are more likely to be arrested on new drug charges since Proposition 36 took effect than before voters approved the landmark law mandating drug treatment rather than incarceration, according a long-awaited study released Friday.The state-funded study, conducted by UCLA researchers who have pored by four years of drug-related court cases, raises new questions about the effectiveness of Proposition 36 at a day when lawmakers and courts are discussing stricter requirements for defendants.
UCLA researchers tracking drug offenders found high levels of new drug arrests among those eligible in the first year of Proposition 36, which took effect in 2001.
Original post by Jason Schwartz
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