reconsiDer: TIDBIT
We've been hearing about how the government's anti-drug
programs are going to bring us a safe society for years. Now the government's
own Office of Management and Budget has taken a look and found the Safe and
Drug-free School Program, the Weed and Seed Program, Drug Courts, the
DEA and several other highly touted and expensive programs are either
unproven or inneffective. Get ready for the double-speak from these agencies and
the politicians that told us how wonderful they are as they attempt to tell us
why we need to continue to fund them.
DRUG
WAR'S FINANCES PROBED
White House Study Questions
Programs' Value
WASHINGTON - It's questionable whether taxpayers
are getting good value from
a series of anti-drug efforts, according to a new
White House analysis of
several hundred federal programs, including drug
courts and TV commercials
aimed at teens.
One, the safe and drug-free
school program, was judged a failure. Although
the Bush administration said
the assessments were not linked to its budget
proposals for 2004, it has
proposed cutting the schools program by $50
million.
It's not a bad
idea to examine the effectiveness of programs Uncle Sam pays
for, said Rep.
Mark Souder, R-3rd. But he thinks this approach is too
simplistic when it
comes to fighting illegal drugs.
Souder heads the subcommittee that
oversees anti-drug programs. The ones
included in the administration's
analysis spend nearly $4 billion a year.
But Bush administration budget
chief Mitch Daniels said looking at the
results produced by government
programs - rather than by how much money they
spent - is long
overdue.
Besides, he said, President Bush proposed spending more money on
anti-drug
programs next year - keeping pace with a 4 percent inflation rate -
than he
did for this year, although not as much as Congress
allocated.
Daniels said Bush wants to put more money in some areas, such
as new program
to give vouchers to treatment-seeking drug addicts so they
could enroll in
religious-sponsored programs. The voucher system would get
$200 million
under Bush's budget.
"Only in Washington would it seem
radical to identify what works and what
doesn't," Daniels said.
For
the first time, the White House assessed the management and performance
of
federal programs. This year, 20 percent of the government - 234 programs
and
agencies - were critiqued. Each year, the same percentage will be
evaluated
until the whole federal government has come under scrutiny.
Daniels said
the questions were the same for every agency and program, an
attempt to be
fair and weed out any ideological bias.
The "grade" each agency gets
ranges from effective (6 percent of all
programs) to ineffective (5 percent).
Fifty percent were judged "results not
demonstrated," one step above
ineffective.
The grim evaluations were cause for celebration among some
who oppose the
government's anti-drug strategy.
"It is not surprising
that the (Drug Enforcement Administration) is facing
criticism from the Bush
administration, the most stalwart supporters of the
war on drugs. Instead of
working toward any meaningful goals, for the past
few years the DEA has been
focused on arresting medical marijuana patients
who were not violating state
laws and seeking to ban the lawful consumption
and sale of hemp food through
interpretative rules," said Shawn Heller,
director of Students for a Sensible
Drug Policy.
Of the anti-drug programs examined this year, the budget
agency said:
* Drug Enforcement Administration: Results not
demonstrated.
The Office of Management and Budget said the $1.5 billion
agency "is unable
to demonstrate its progress in reducing the availability of
illegal drugs in
the U.S. . . . DEA managers are not held accountable for
achieving results."
Fort Wayne has a small DEA office.
"I'm a big
supporter of DEA, but they can use cost pressures, too,"
Souder
said.
* Drug courts: Results not demonstrated.
OMB
said the program's finances are well-managed, and independent analyses
say
they provide "an effective intervention to substance abusers who might
not
otherwise receive treatment." Nevertheless, the budget agency said the
drug
courts program needs to do a better job of tracking participants after
they
leave the program.
The local drug court, launched in 1997 by Superior
Court Judge Kenneth
Scheibenberger, received federal financing for its first
three years.
* Safe and drug-free schools: Ineffective.
The
program provides nearly $5.6 million to Hoosier schools, including
$308,000
to the four public school systems in Allen County, to reduce youth
crime and
drug abuse. OMB said the program is spread too thin to
be
effective.
This year Fort Wayne Community Schools is using its
$244,000 for a program
to prevent bullying, encourage responsible thinking
classes for elementary
students and parents, and promote staff
development.
Souder said he opposes Bush's $50 million cut. But he said
he agreed that
some schools are using their grants for programs that are not
related to
reducing drug use and that Congress should tighten the
rules.
* Substance abuse treatment programs of regional and
national significance:
Adequate.
The program, which Bush wants to
boost by $200 million to include vouchers
for drug treatment at
religious-based programs, awards grants for drug
treatment.
*
Drug interdiction by the Coast Guard: Results not demonstrated.
OMB said
the program is well managed but has weak strategic planning.
* Weed
and Seed: Results not demonstrated.
The program is designed to reduce
violent and drug-related crime in
high-crime areas and provides grants to
local communities that target drug
markets and offer after-school activities
for at-risk children, for
instance.
OMB said even though the program
is 11 years old, only a few Weed and Seed
sites have been independently
evaluated. It said part of the problem is that
the Justice Department "has
been adverse to setting goals implying that any
level of crime is
'successful.' "
* High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area: Results not
demonstrated.
The program provides money to establish multiagency drug
task forces in
areas that have a lot of drug use and sales and drug-related
crime.
The program "seems to have lost its focus," OMB's evaluators said.
The first
five areas designated met the criteria set by Congress, OMB said,
but 23
additional areas have been added since 1995 and "are now located in 41
of
the 50 states."
"The magnitude of this expansion shows a disregard
for the clear intent of
the statute to focus on the nation's very worst
areas," the evaluation says.
Indiana's only High Intensity Drug
Trafficking Area, in Lake County, was
created in 1997 and has received $18
million in federal grants.
* Residential substance abuse treatment:
Results not demonstrated.
The grants are used to try to reduce drug abuse
among prisoners as a way of
reducing reducing repeat offenders. OMB said half
the grant recipients
didn't report their results.
* Anti-drug TV
commercials aimed at youth: Results not demonstrated.
"There is no
evidence of direct effect on youth behavior," OMB said of the
program that
remains contentious in Congress.
The White House said if it doesn't see
results, it will kill the program in
2005.
Souder noted that the TV
commercial campaign is one of only two major
drug-prevention programs the
federal government pays for. He said the OMB
report doesn't take into account
how much drug use among teens would
increase without the ads they see on
television several times a week.
"We've seen three straight years, in
most places, of a drop in drug abuse.
If that's a measure, all these programs
are working," Souder said.
Souder said if the same sort of evaluation
were done in a private business,
all OMB's questions would be asked, but the
final question would be: What
are the things that can't be controlled that
affect the outcome?
"Let's say I sell mattresses at a furniture store. I
didn't reach my quota.
But three of our four competitors had sales that were
lower prices than
ours, and we had two blizzards that month. Everyone can
come up with
excuses, but you look at that and ask whether the explanations
were helpful
in further defining the goal," he said.
Souder said there
are extenuating circumstances that a cut-and-dried
evaluation can't
consider.
For instance, he said, if 3,500 Fort Wayne-area people are
released from
prison in the next few years and crime goes up, "does that mean
that all of
a sudden the drug court program, the Weed and Seed, the treatment
programs
and drug-free schools aren't working as well? Or does it mean we
released
them out of prison?"
Nevertheless, Souder said, many of the
questions OMB raised are worth
asking.
But, he said, "the whole point
of the evaluation is basically, in program
after program, to say no increase.
OMB's got to be the hit guys. It's their
job to control the
budget."
It's an assessment others share.
Ellen Taylor, an analyst
for OMB Watch, a liberal-leaning think tank,
likened the assessment program
to "the grade-school sticker method used to
reward good work or punish bad
work. Its very simplicity, however, makes it
a potentially powerful method to
justify budget cuts or increases."
Not so, Daniels said.
"The
principal purpose is diagnostic," he said. "To find out what's wrong
and
what's
missing."
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