African American Professional Organizations Launch Historic Collaboration To Change Drug Policies
National African American Drug
Policy Coalition Includes Black Lawyers, Psychologists, Legislators, Nurses,
Dentists, Social Workers, Sociologists and Others
Urgently seeking alternatives to
misguided drug policies that have made it more likely for an African American
man to be in prison than college, key African American professional
organizations have joined forces as the National African American Drug Policy
Coalition (NAADPC), a five-year program to reduce and prevent illegal drug usage
and related crime in the African American community.
Founded by Clyde E. Bailey, Sr., the
National Bar Association's immediate past president and patent counsel at
Eastman Kodak, the Coalition includes the National Bar Association; Howard
University School of Law; the National Association of Black Sociologists; the
National Association of Black Psychologists; the National Association of Black
Social Workers; the National Black Nurses Association; the National Dental
Association; the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives; the
Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, Inc.; and the National Black Caucus of
State Legislators.
Working with initial support from The
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Coalition is determined to stop ineffective
policies that blindly push punishment as the only way to stop people from using
drugs and to advance a public health approach which emphasizes the use of
quality addiction treatment and other alternatives, as appropriate.
"Not only have they failed to
reduce drug use, these policies are doing irreparable harm to the African
American community and do not advance public safety," said Coalition
National Executive Director Arthur L. Burnett, Sr., retired senior judge in the
District of Columbia." Who would have thought 20 years ago that today there
would be more African American men serving time than there are pursuing college
degrees? We need to confront the futility of fighting a public health problem
solely with prison."
According to a 2002 report by the
Justice Policy Institute, at the end of 2000, 791,600 African-American men were
behind bars-with drug-related offenses the most common reason for
incarceration-compared to 603,032 enrolled in a college or university. By
contrast, in 1980, African American men in colleges and universities outnumbered
those in prison by a ratio of more than 3 to 1.
The Coalition, which is co-chaired by
Kurt L. Schmoke, former mayor of the city of Baltimore and dean of the Howard
University School of Law, and Clyde Bailey, is focused on treatment, education
and prevention programs that, unlike criminal sanctions, have proven effective
at reducing drug use and prison recidivism, thus reducing crimes and making
communities safer.
Among other things, the Coalition is
fighting to make treatment available to the poor and uninsured and promoting
prevention programs that have demonstrated the ability to steer young people
away from drug use. It also is putting a spotlight on drug law enforcement
activities that have a disproportionate impact on African Americans, other
ethnic minorities, and the poor.
As part of their advocacy efforts,
Coalition members plan to host a series of seminars across the country to spark
a national dialogue on the need to approach addictions to drugs as a public
health problem first, and a criminal problem second. The Coalition plans to
develop targeted programs around pretrial diversion and therapeutic sentencing.
Programs around drug and alcohol prevention and treatment will be initiated in
seven pilot cities. Those cities are Chicago, IL, Huntsville, AL, Flint, MI,
Seattle, WA, Baltimore, MD, Washington, D.C., and a yet to be determined city in
the U.S. Virgin Islands.
"What we hope to do is to shift
public resources into education, prevention, treatment and research programs
that have proven more effective in reducing drug abuse rather than through the
use of expensive criminal sanctions. We are trying to focus on the health issue
of these people rather than criminalizing that behavior," said Clyde E.
Bailey.
"Effective treatment will reduce
the number of crimes which would otherwise have been committed by these
individuals, thus making the community safer and reducing the costs of law
enforcement and the courts which would have been expended in connection with new
crimes," said Arthur L. Burnett, Sr.
Kurt L. Schmoke said, "This
Coalition is the most broad-based group I have ever seen. I hope that it will
move drug control policy in a more constructive direction, especially as it
relates to people of color. A major effort will focus on therapeutic sentencing,
where we will educate and train judges to provide sentences to drug offenders
that will make them better people coming out of prison than they were going
in."
The National African American Drug
Policy Coalition is a preeminent multidisciplinary team of African American
professional organizations united to promote public health versus
criminalization, as a less expensive, more effective and humane approach to
address the chronic societal problem of drug abuse. For more information
contact: The Honorable Arthur L. Burnett, Sr., National Executive Director,
National African American Drug Policy Coalition, Phone: 202-806-8211.
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation,
based in Princeton, NJ, is the nation's largest philanthropy devoted exclusively
to health and health care. It concentrates its grant making in four goal areas:
to assure that all Americans have access to quality health care at reasonable
cost; to improve the quality of care and support for people with chronic health
conditions; to promote healthy communities and lifestyles; and to reduce the
personal, social and economic harm caused by substance abuse - tobacco, alcohol
and illicit drugs. More information on RWJF can be found at www.rwjf.org.
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