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Obama's Drug Czar Nominee Approved a Potential
Break From the Past:
Is the US Finally Going to Get Pragmatic About
Drug Policy?
By Kevin Zeese
ccun.org, May 10, 2009
This week, Obama’s drug czar nominee was approved by the senate.
Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske, has the potential to be the best drug
czar ever appointed to that position. We may finally get a pragmatic
solutions-oriented approach to drug control rather than drug war rhetoric
that prevents real solutions.
While drug policy reformers were advocating for a public health
professional as drug czar, President Obama went with a police chief.
He made a potentially ground-breaking pick as the former police chief of
Seattle has been good on needle exchange, medical marijuana, treatment and
health services for addicts and he ushered in a new law to make marijuana
the lowest prosecution priority in Seattle. He is a pragmatist
who could shift the United States away from continuing to make the same
mistakes over and over when it comes to drug policy.
The drug war is the issue I've worked most on over the last thirty years
and one I follow very closely as president of Common Sense for Drug Policy (www.csdp.org).
Drugs are an issue that seem unsolvable in the U.S. because every
administration does the same thing - emphasizes enforcement at the expense
of effectiveness. It is not surprising that doing the same thing over
and over and getting the same result over and over makes a problem look
unsolvable. In fact, there are lots of changes that can be
made -- even within the confines of drug prohibition -- that can improve the
situation. When I served on Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke's Working
Group on Drug Policy in the late 1980s he asked us to come up with
policies -- within the framework of keeping drugs illegal (since he could
not change that as a mayor) -- that would improve how drugs were handled in
Baltimore. There was a lot Schmoke did that made a positive
difference, e.g. needle exchange, drug courts, treatment on request and
social services for addicts. Obama's police chief drug czar
comes from a city that has been at the forefront of reform. It was one
of the early cities to emphasize public health approaches to addiction by
making treatment more available and supporting needle exchange, methadone
vans and harm reduction programs. It has developed a strong public health
infrastructure with programs treat addicts as humans rather than as
criminals. And, these programs make a tremendous positive difference
for the person using drugs as well as the community he or she lives in.
They reduce the spread of HIV and reduce crime. Seattle reform
activist Dominic Holden writes about how Kerlikowske has handled needle
exchange and harm reduction in Seattle:
"’There has been
long-standing support in the community as a whole and from SPD for our
continued operation of the needle exchange,’ says James Apa, a spokesman for
Seattle King County Public Health, which runs one of first and the nation's
largest needle-exchange programs. Seattle IV drug users have some of
the lowest HIV-infection rates in the country, he says. But acceptance of
the controversial program hasn't been that long standing. "’What we
would find is that police would hang around the exchange site and watch who
came and went,’ says Kris Nyrop, former director of Street Outreach
Services, a pioneering needle exchange group that operated a table in
downtown Seattle in the late 1980s. ‘Their presence itself would be somewhat
intimidating ... people would see four police officers halfway down the
block and they would turn around and go home,’ he says. ‘Harassment like
that happened routinely up until the mid '90s.’ “But under
Kerlikowske, ‘It has been a laissez-faire thing and the police basically
leave needle exchanges alone,’ says Nyrop.” Needle exchange is a
public health program to prevent the spread of HIV that research has shown
reduces transmission without increasing drug use. It is part of what
Europeans call “harm reduction,” i.e. reducing the harm caused by drugs to
the individual and community. It is something that has been opposed by the
U.S. drug enforcement bureaucracy. In addition, Kerlikowske replaced
enforcement with public services and alternatives to arrest. One program his
department implemented was the Get Off The Streets (GOTS) program. A
police officer set up a table as an “arrest-free area” for people who had
outstanding warrants. They could come to the table and get health and
human services rather than be arrested. City Council Member Nick
Lacata says that Kerlikowske could have stopped the program from getting
funding by the city, “but he allowed it to go forward.” Licata says
that while Kerlikowske is not going to end the drug war but “he recognizes
that it has not been a success and I think he is open to other strategies.”
During Chief Kerlikowske’s tenure as police chief Seattle voted in
favor of Initiative 75 in 2003 which made marijuana the lowest law
enforcement priority. The public sent a message with their vote that
they did not want limited law enforcement resources spent on marijuana
offenses. Chief Kerlikowske did not support I75 but when this
law passed his administration implemented the law. The Seattle Police
told a City Council Marijuana Policy Review Panel that “officers [had] been
verbally advised during their roll calls that investigation and arrest of
adults for possession of cannabis intended for personal use is to be their
lowest priority.” The result, the city reduced marijuana possession arrests
by more than half in six years and redirected law enforcement resources to
real crime. Seattle’s crime rate is now at a historical 40-year low.
Kerlikowske worked closely with the organizers of the Seattle Hempfest – the
largest marijuana reform gathering in the nation. More than 200,000
people attend the annual event. The Seattle Police essentially allowed
the organizers to police themselves. They kept a very low key presence
at the event and did not seek out marijuana consumers at the festival for
arrest. One common denominator of previous drug czar’s is
they all made marijuana the top priority of their attention. The
current drug czar, John Walters, wrote U.S. attorneys “[N]o drug matches the
threat posed by marijuana” reflecting the views of Democrats and
Republicans. Indeed, looking at the history of drug czar's -- really a
rogue's gallery including right wing social conservatives like Bill Bennett
(who hid his gambling addiction while punishing other addicts) and extreme
militarist Barry McCaffery (accused of war crimes in the first Gulf War) ---
Kerlikowske could be the superstar of drug czars. If he personally
holds views consistent with his experience in Seattle the U.S. may actually
begin to solve the seemingly unsolvable drug issue. It would be a
welcome change to have a pragmatist rather than an ideologue in charge of
drug policy.
Kerlikowske, a 36 year police veteran, is a tough police chief who is
widely respected and widely criticized. When appointed by Obama he was
serving as president of the Major Cities Chiefs Association, an organization
composed of 56 largest law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and has been a
chief in three previous cities in New York and Florida. He has been
extremely aggressive with environmental and anti-corporate trade
demonstrators some say violating their free speech rights. He has also
used the forfeiture power of police aggressively and has been proud of para-military
units in his police force. And, his force – like too many in the
United States – has been criticized for abuse of African Americans.
The marijuana issue and drug war more generally have gotten a lot of
attention lately, particularly the battlefronts of Mexico and Afghanistan.
There is debate in the media about legalization and decriminalization,
especially of marijuana. So, Kerlikowske takes the helm at a time of
potential change to more sensible policies. We’ll see whether
pragmatism, ideology or the long-term habit of “drug war” politics wins out.
Kevin Zeese is executive director of the Campaign for
Fresh Air & Clean Politics (www.FreshAirCleanPolitics.net)
as well as president of Common Sense for Drug Policy (www.csdp.org).
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