The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #106 -- September 3, 1999
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

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================

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. California Governor Offers to Sign Revised Needle
   Exchange Bill
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#ab518

2. CASA Study Finds Marijuana Easier for Teens to Get Than
   Beer
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#casastudy

3. Doctor Sanctioned for Undertreating Patients' Pain
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#painsanctions

4. Los Angeles Police Forcibly Enter Home, Kill Grandfather
   in Raid
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#badraid

5. News in Brief
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#newsbriefs

6. Swiss Government Promises Marijuana Decriminalization
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#swissdecrim

7. ACLU Report Urges Businesses to Rethink Employee Drug
   Testing
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#aclureport

8. Media Alert:  Print and Screen
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/106.html#printandscreen

================

1. California Governor Offers to Sign Revised Needle
   Exchange Bill

After threatening to veto AB 518, a needle exchange bill 
passed by both houses of the California legislature, Gov. 
Gray Davis has offered to sign a compromise bill that allows 
communities to authorize needle exchange programs, but only 
by issuing emergency orders that must be renewed every two 
weeks.  Davis' shift follows calls from elected officials of 
both parties, including Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, a 
Republican, and 21 members of California's Congressional 
delegation, in an open letter organized by U.S. Rep. Nancy 
Pelosi.  AB 518 was sponsored by Assemblymember Kerry 
Mazzoni, who represents Marin County, one of the 
jurisdictions that issues emergency orders to protect the 
local needle exchange.  The original bill required local 
authorization of needle exchange programs, but did not 
require the biweekly emergency orders.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, 9/1, Pat Christen, 
Executive Director of the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, 
said, "It is deeply discouraging that a compromise was 
necessary given the lives at stake, the overwhelming 
scientific evidence and the polling data in support of 
needle exchange.  Nevertheless, the compromise is clearly a 
step in the right direction, consistent with our agency's 
harm reduction approach to HIV prevention."  SFAF operates 
the HIV Prevention Point needle exchange, the largest such 
program in the country, which provides over 2.1 million 
syringes annually, to over 5,000 people.

Many communities, however, have shied away from needle 
exchange programs, due to the legal ambiguity of local 
official support vs. state law that makes provision of 
syringes without a prescription a misdemeanor.  SFAF Public 
Policy Director Regina Arag˘n said, "Our hope is that, once 
[AB 518 is] enacted, additional communities across the state 
will take advantage of these legal protections."

Because the exact language of the compromise has not been 
finalized, it is not yet possible to assess the likely 
impact on communities that wish to offer needle exchange.

(See http://www.drcnet.org/wol/105.html#nepsupport for 
results of the recent Field Institute survey and 
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#caldelegation for 
additional background information on AB 518.  Visit Syringe 
Exchange Resources Online at http://www.projectsero.org for 
much more about the needle exchange issue.)

================

2. CASA Study Finds Marijuana Easier for Teens to Get Than
   Beer

Joe Califano's Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse 
released results this week of a survey that asked 2,000 
teens and 1,000 parents about attitudes and opinions on 
drugs and drug use.  Among the least surprising, if most 
trumpeted results are findings that teens who have stable 
relationships with both parents are less likely to use drugs 
than those who describe their intra-familial relationships 
as antagonistic.

Bonnie Ross, a high school prevention, resource and 
intervention counselor in Oregon, told The Week Online that 
the issue of kids' parental relationships as a risk factor 
for substance abuse was a no-brainer.

"How much did they spend to do that survey?" she asked.  
"That conclusion would be a pretty obvious one for anyone 
who works with kids who use or abuse drugs.  The money for 
that survey would have been better spent on resources for 
these kids.  Stable connections, whether it be with parents, 
educators, coaches, any caring adult, really, serve as an 
anchor.  Kids who feel disconnected and adrift in the world 
are more likely to seek escape and to engage in high-risk 
behaviors."

More interesting, but buried in the news coverage of the 
report, was the teens' response to a question about the 
availability of various substances.  Specifically, teens 
were asked which was easier to obtain among cigarettes, beer 
and marijuana.  While the overwhelming majority of teens 
listed cigarettes as the easiest, marijuana was a clear 
second.  In fact, nearly nine times as many teens (35%) 
listed the prohibited marijuana as easiest to obtain as 
listed beer (5%), which of course is legal and regulated.

Dr. Marsha Rosenbaum, Director of Lindesmith Center West, a 
drug policy think tank, told The Week Online that the 
availability of marijuana relative to alcohol is a product 
of a misguided policy.

"The question of availability is part of the larger 
question, that is, what are we getting for our money in the 
drug war," said Rosenbaum.  "We're spending two thirds of 
our federal drug budget on efforts to keep drugs off the 
streets.  The teenagers in this survey tell us how well 
that's working.  It isn't."

"Interdiction has never worked, and will never work," she 
continued.  "That is a given.  If marijuana markets were 
operating under a system similar to alcohol, it would be 
more difficult for our kids to get access.  People who 
support the status quo in drug policy often smear reform 
efforts by frightening people with the word "legalization," 
when in fact what reformers are talking about is regulation 
and control.  Under prohibition, we have no control and thus 
we have kids who can buy marijuana at any age with no 
problem at all."

================

3. Doctor Sanctioned for Undertreating Patients' Pain

Last April, the Week Online reported that the Oregon Board 
of Medical Examiners had taken the unprecedented step of 
disciplining a doctor, Dr. Paul A. Bilder, for undertreating 
pain (http:www.drcnet.org/wol/087.html#undertreatment).  In 
the "war on drugs," medical boards and drug enforcers have 
more often favored very limited prescription of opioids, or 
narcotics, substances which are also used and abused non-
medically.  (See our discussion of drug policies' impact on 
pain control at <http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/pain.html>.)

The Associated Press reported yesterday that the Board had 
determined a penalty in the case, requiring Bilder, 55, to 
sign a stipulated order acknowledging that his treatment 
showed unprofessional or dishonorable conduct and 
negligence; complete the Physicians Evaluation Education 
Renewal program (PEER), a one-year program in which another 
doctor in Bilder's field works with him to assess his 
practice and make improvements; complete a course on 
physician-patient communication; and continue meeting with a 
psychiatrist who will give regular reports to the board for 
at least a year.

Dr. Harvey Rose, a California physician who led the effort 
to pass California's Intractable Pain Treatment Act, feels 
the penalty was too severe.  Rose told the Week Online, "It 
reminds me of the old cartoon of the devil offering his new 
visitor the choice of two doors: one of them labeled 'damned 
if you do' and the other 'damned if you don't'."  Rose 
explained, "The article says that people described him as a 
compassionate doctor, and he probably was.  But he was a 
scared doctor, and the board is the reason he was scared, 
because of its past policies."  Rose suggested the board's 
approach at this point should be educational, rather than 
punitive.  "They should have made him take some CME courses 
to be reeducated on pain management, and kept him under 
observation for a year to give him a chance to modify his 
practice."  Rose continued, the danger of punishing doctors 
for underprescribing, when for years the situation has been 
the opposite, is that doctor won't want to have anything to 
do with pain patients at all."  Dr. Rose was featured in an 
August 9th article in the New York Times.

Fear of medical board sanctions may pale in comparison to 
the fear of criminal prosecution by drug enforcers.  Dr. 
Allen S. Licher, former president of the American Society of 
Clinical Oncology, told the New York Times that relatively 
few criminal cases for overprescribing narcotics have been 
brought against doctors, "but the ones that were had a 
tremendously chilling effect.  Doctors just did not want to 
take the chance of getting caught up in that."  Fear of hard 
prison time at the hands of prosecutors and juries who 
misinterpret the evidence on pain control could go a long 
way to explain why doctors undertreat or don't treat pain.

(Visit the American Society for Action on Pain at 
http://www.actiononpain.org for much more information on 
this important issue and how patients can help themselves 
find adequate treatment.  See our June 18 issue at 
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/095.html#painbill to read about 
current pain legislation that some advocates think will hurt 
rather help pain control.  Read our 1996 article, War on 
Pain Control (http://www.drcnet.org/guide10-96/pain.html) 
for an example of what can happen to pain patients and the 
doctors who treat them in the drug war.

================

4. Los Angeles Police Forcibly Enter Home, Kill Grandfather
   in Raid

20 officers from an "elite" Los Angeles SWAT team operating 
under the jurisdiction of the El Monte police department 
shot the locks off the doors of the home of Mario Paz, 
grandfather of fourteen, in raiding his house as part of a 
marijuana investigation in Compton last week.  Once inside, 
the officers used stun grenades to create a distraction, and 
shot Paz twice in the back, killing him, as he kneeled on 
the floor of his bedroom.  Paz, who had no criminal record, 
kept at least two firearms in his home for protection, but 
was unarmed at the time of the shooting.

But neither Paz nor anyone in his family was a suspect in 
the investigation.  In fact, police got the warrant to enter 
the Paz home simply because his address appeared among the 
papers of one of the suspects, who had years ago lived in 
the house next door to the Paz family.

A spokesperson for the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department 
told The Week Online that the police "had information 
linking the house to a narcotics operation."  The 
spokesperson, however, said that his office had no 
information on the specifics of the warrant.

The El Monte police department told The Week Online that 
there was no one available to comment on the case.

Brian Dunn, attorney for the Paz family, told The Week 
Online that the methods used by the SWAT team were wholly 
disproportionate to the situation.

"This case represents an extreme example of police 
brutality, misconduct and ruthlessness," said Dunn.  "The 
manner in which they executed this was homicidal.  The 
police shot through both doors and a window with shotguns at 
eleven o'clock at night.  Everyone in the house was asleep.  
The family all thought that they were being robbed.  We have 
no evidence that the police so much as identified 
themselves.  Mr. Paz and his wife were both in their 
underwear when he was shot twice in the back."

In this case, Dunn continued, the police had no evidence to 
make them believe that anyone in the home was even involved 
in the crime they were investigating, nor that there was any 
dangerous person in the house.  If you're going to blast 
your way into a private home, you'd better have some 
convincing information that there is either a war going on 
inside or that someone inside is waiting to kill you.  This 
was just outrageous."

================

5. News in Brief

Jane Tseng, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

BCCLU Fights Spy-Cam in City Park

The British Columbia Civil Liberties Union announced last 
Friday (8/27) that they were planning to ask the federal 
privacy commissioner to rule that the Royal Canadian Mounted 
Police acted improperly when they failed to warn the public 
about a security camera they installed in a park in downtown 
Kelowna, BC in July.  Local police claim the camera led to 
the arrest of several suspected drug dealers before it fell 
victim to arsonists.  BCCLU spokesman Dan Beyerstein told 
the Daily Courier that the privacy commissioner, which 
handles complaints against the RCMP, had no authority to 
prohibit the reinstallation of the camera, but that a ruling 
in the BCCLU's favor could be useful to defense attorneys.  
At a city council meeting last month, Kelowna Mayor Walter 
Gray defended the use of spy-cams, saying that "Security 
Cameras are now a way of life.  If we can get four or five 
or six more of them, we will.  So there."

Web of Federal Anti-Crime Initiatives Along the Border 
Netting Small Fry

The Houston Chronicle reports this week that the federal 
Southwest Border Initiatives, which took effect five years 
ago in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California, have 
resulted in federal dockets being overloaded with cases 
against small-time drug dealers and people who cross the 
border illegally.  In Texas alone last year, federal courts 
reported a 69% increase in drug prosecutions.

Ron Woods, a former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District 
in Texas, told the Chronicle that the reason for the shift 
in resources from prosecuting high-level traffickers to 
people caught dealing as little as half a pound of marijuana 
is partly because, "it's easier to do the smaller cases than 
to put 10 agents on a complicated case for a year."

The increase in federal prosecution of drug and immigration 
crimes has also filled federal prisons to the point where 
some prisoners are now being housed in state prisons, at a 
cost to the federal government -- thus, to taxpayers -- of 
$650 million a year.

"It's a numbers game," Woods said.  "The administration 
likes to point to the number of indictments and say they're 
up.  They're tough on crime."

================

6. Swiss Government Promises Marijuana Decriminalization

(courtesy NORML Foundation, http://www.norml.org)

Sept. 2, 1999, Switzerland:  Switzerland's marijuana 
prohibition may be a thing of the past, as government 
officials have promised to decriminalize marijuana use and 
possession.  Drug use will remain illegal for children under 
18 years of age.

A Swiss government study shows 27 percent of 15-35 year olds 
in the country use cannabis.  "We remain in the lead for the 
innovative approaches addressing drug-related issues," said 
Thomas Zeltner, director of Switzerland's Federal Department 
for Health.  "The consumption of cannabis can't be avoided 
through prohibition," the Swiss Department of the Interior 
said in its proposal.  "We aim to adapt legislation to 
reality in the area of drug consumption."

The proposal stated cannabis "does relatively little damage 
to health" and under certain circumstances "can have a 
therapeutic effect."  The Swiss Government has also 
suggested criminal penalties for the use of harder drugs 
such as cocaine be eliminated as well.

In June, voters approved legislation to legally provide 
heroin to addicts if they have a prescription.  "It's 
amazing to see just how isolated the United States is 
becoming on the issue of marijuana," said Allen St. Pierre, 
NORML Foundation Executive Director.  "While European 
countries and Canada are crafting meaningful legal reforms
-- reflecting modern mores in a rational public policy --
America is increasingly relying on expanding the budgets and 
power of the 'three Ps': police, prosecutors, and prisons."

================

7. ACLU Report Urges Businesses to Rethink Employee Drug
   Testing

(from the American Civil Liberties Union,
 http://www.aclu.org)

This Wednesday (9/1), the American Civil Liberties Union 
issued a special report urging corporate America to drop 
workplace urine testing, citing evidence that the tests do 
not pay dividends in decreased accidents and absenteeism or 
increased efficiency and productivity.

The 27-page white paper, "Drug Testing: A Bad Investment," 
examines ten years of research and empirical evidence on 
drug use among workers, its impact on work performance, and 
whether urine testing is an effective tool for identifying 
drug abusers in the workplace.

Driven by an industry-led panic that drug use is common -- 
even epidemic -- in America's workforce, employers today 
require tens of millions of American workers from all walks 
of life -- most of whom are not even suspected of using 
drugs -- to pass a urine test to get a new job or to keep 
the one they have.

According to the ACLU's report, the drug testing industry's 
promotion of "junk science," based on unsubstantiated claims 
and phantom research, has fueled the growth of employee drug 
testing since the mid-1980's.  But respected scientific 
institutions such as the National Academy of Sciences have 
looked at the record and found little support for most of 
the drug testing industry's claims.

"We have always believed drug testing of unimpaired workers 
stands the presumption of innocence on its head and violates 
the most fundamental privacy rights," said ACLU Executive 
Director Ira Glasser.  "Now we know that sacrificing these 
rights serves no legitimate business purpose either."

Among the report's findings:

 * "Lost productivity" studies claiming that drug users cost 
businesses up to $100 billion each year are based on dubious 
comparisons of household drug use and income, with no 
analysis of actual productivity data.

 * The moderate use of illicit drugs by workers during off-
duty hours is no more likely to compromise workplace safety 
than moderate off-duty alcohol use.

 * A recent survey of 63 Silicon Valley companies found that 
urine testing reduces, rather than enhances, worker 
productivity.

 * Although some federal employers and private businesses 
are required by law to test employees in specific safety-
sensitive occupations, most employers are under no 
obligation to conduct drug testing.  Yet according to a 1996 
survey, 81 percent of Fortune 500 firms conducted urine 
tests on their employees.

"It's time for employers to ask themselves whether 
subjecting their employees to such an invasive and 
humiliating procedure is worth the cost, not only in human 
terms, but in actual dollars and cents," said Lewis Maltby, 
director of the ACLU's National Taskforce on Civil Liberties 
in the Workplace and lead author of the report.

"Alternative solutions, such as impairment testing of 
workers in safety-sensitive positions and wider use of 
Employee Assistance Programs are more cost effective and do 
not raise the same privacy and fairness problems," he added.

Maltby said he is sending "Drug Testing: A Bad Investment" 
to CEOs, union officials and human resources professionals, 
along with a letter urging them to consider less intrusive 
alternatives to urine tests as a condition of employment.

The ACLU has also established a toll-free number, (800) 323-
8820, that human resources managers can call for more 
information on drug testing and its alternatives.

The report's executive summary is online at 
<http://www.aclu.org/issues/worker/summdrugtesting1999.html>, 
and the full text is available in Adobe (PDF) format at 
<http://www.aclu.org/issues/worker/drugtesting1999.pdf>.

================

8. Media Alert:  Print and Screen

Beyond Legalization:  Special Issue of The Nation Focuses on 
Alternatives to the Drug War

The September 20 issue of The Nation magazine features an 
extensive set of articles discussing the war on drugs and 
alternatives to current policies.  The features starts with 
a forum, led off by Michael Massing, with Mike Gray and 
others responding, also available online at 
<http://www.thenation.com>.  Other articles cover drug 
policy in Baltimore, drug policy Europe, drug courts, 
attitudes on drug policy in the black community, marinol vs. 
marijuana, George Soros' philanthropy, and more.  This 
special issue of The Nation is on newsstands now.

Documentary:  The Pursuit of Happiness: Smoking, Drinking 
and Drugging in the 20th Century

The Showtime cable channel will premiere a documentary by 
director Robert Zemeckis on September 13, as part of its "In 
the 20th Century" millenium related series, dealing with 
attitudes and practices related to drug use and societal 
responses to drug use in America.  According to a film 
review in the New York Times on August 29, "The Pursuit of 
Happiness" presents such images as Desi Arnaz hawking Camel 
cigarettes, Newt Gingrich advocating the death penalty for 
drug dealing, Jack Webb pontificating on the horrors of LSD, 
tobacco executives swearing that cigarettes aren't addictive 
and a psychedelically dressed Sonny Bono urging his fans 
"not to become potheads."

(You can find the review by visiting http://www.nytimes.com 
and doing an archive search on "Robert Zemeckis."  You will 
have to register for free if you are not already.  Visit 
http://www.showtimeonline.com/home/product.tin?znumber=106247
for further information or to sign up for an e-mail 
reminder to watch the show.)

================

Editorials will return next week.

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