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By Bob Curley (July 18, 2007) -- The mayors of America's large cities have
unanimously approved a resolution stating that the drug war "has failed"
and calling for a harm-reduction oriented approach to drug policy that focuses
on public health.
The U.S. Conference of Mayors adopted the resolution during its June
21-26 annual meeting in Los Angeles, calling for a "new bottom line"
in
drug policy that "concentrates more fully on reducing the negative
consequences associated with drug abuse, while ensuring that our
policies do not exacerbate these problems or create new social problems
of their own; establishes quantifiable, short- and long-term objectives
for drug policy; saves taxpayers money; and holds state and federal
agencies responsible."
Sponsored by Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson, the resolution states
that the drug war costs $40 billion annually but has not cut drug use or
demand. It slams the Office of National Drug Control Policy's (ONDCP)
drug-prevention programs -- specifically, the agency's national
anti-drug media campaign -- as "costly and ineffective," but called
drug
treatment cost-effective and a major contributor to public safety
because it prevents criminal behavior.
"This Conference recognizes that addiction is a chronic medical illness
that is treatable, and drug treatment success rates exceed those of many
cancer therapies," the document states.
The resolution condemns mandatory minimum sentences and incarceration of
drug offenders, particularly minorities, and called for more control of
anti-drug spending and priorities at the local level, where the impact
is most acutely felt.
"U.S. policy should not be measured solely on drug-use levels or number
of people imprisoned, but rather on the amount of drug-related harm
reduced," according to the resolution. The document calls for more
accountability among federal, state and local drug agencies, with
funding tied to performance measures, more treatment funding and
alternatives to incarceration, and lifting the federal funding ban for
needle-exchanges.
The resolution, which will be used to guide the U.S. Conference of
Mayors' Washington lobbying on addiction issues, passed with minimal
debate, clearing two committees and the general assembly by unanimous votes.
"The mayors are clearly signaling the serious need for drug policy
reform," said Daniel Abrahamson, director of legal affairs for the Drug
Policy Alliance (DPA), who worked with Anderson's staff to draft the
resolution. Daniel Robelo, a DPA legal research assistant, said the
resolution could become an "incredibly powerful" advocacy tool for
DPA
and other drug-reform groups. "While it has no legal effect, it has a
powerful symbolic effect," he told Join Together.
Alexa Eggleston, director of national policy for the Legal Action
Center, which advocates for increased investment in addiction treatment
and prevention, praised the mayors for acknowledging "that alcohol and
drug addiction is a treatable medical illness and is supportive of
expanding treatment to the approximately 21 million Americans with
alcohol and drug problems who need it, expanding effective prevention
initiatives in communities nationwide, and fighting discrimination
against people with addiction histories by repealing discriminatory laws
and policies that prevent them from accessing employment, insurance, and
other necessities of life."
But Tom Riley, a spokesperson for ONDCP, called the resolution a "grab
bag" of DPA positions and a publicity stunt by proponents of drug
legalization. "We don't think it's very serious," he said of the
resolution, adding that to declare the drug war a failure "is a slogan
rather than a policy proposal."
"Most of the mayors our office talks to consider drugs a huge problem
in
their communities and are anxious to get more resources for prevention,
treatment and law enforcement," said Riley. "I don't know many mayors
who are in favor of drug legalization."
Anderson is no newcomer to the drug issue; he has previously called the
drug war "phony, inhumane, and ineffective," and his official biography
calls him "an outspoken advocate for drug policy reform." He received
the DPA's 2005 Richard J. Dennis Drugpeace Award for outstanding
achievements in the field of drug policy reform.
Nor is Anderson alone in his harsh criticism of the drug war: Newark
Mayor Cory Booker, seen as a rising political leader, recently stated
that he's prepared to go to jail to protest a war on drugs that he sees
as shackling African-Americans into poverty and feeding crime and murder
in his city.
"I'm going to battle on this," Booker recently told the Newark
Star-Ledger. "We're going to start this in the gentlemanly way. And then
we're going to do the civil disobedience way. Because this is absurd."
Booker says he wants to see nonviolent drug offenders placed in
treatment programs and halfway houses, not prisons, and to stop banning
ex-offenders from jobs. "The drug war is causing crime," he said.
"It's
just chewing up young black men. And it's killing Newark."
http://www.jointogether.org/news/features/2007/us-mayors-declare-drug-war.html |