From Deseret News archives:
Lawmakers find no funds to reform drug offenders
Sponsor says DORA would have saved the state millions
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"I don't want to give up just yet," said Pat Flemming, former state substance abuse director and current director of Salt Lake County Substance Abuse. "The key is trying to broker a deal" between the House and Senate, Flemming said.
Buttars said because the House is holding his bill, he hasn't been able to amend it to limit the program "to one year only; there'd be no new money unless there was additional legislation" to give the program a chance to prove itself.
About 4,000 probationers would be treated, he said. "It's a good test because those probationers are re-offending at a rate of about 66 percent. If you give it a year and all at once it drops, like we said it does, to 30 percent, then you'd have all those beds that didn't get re-filled."
Although Buttars said his proposed amendment came at the governor's request, Chaffetz said that was up to lawmakers. "We've made it clear we're supportive, but it's really their decision."
Experts said the consequences of not passing DORA are real. Already many drug treatment programs across the state have waiting lists of court referrals that span months.
"We're faced with a situation where we've got growing referrals from the criminal justice system and we don't have the resources to adequately treat them," said Brent Kelsey, justice program manager for the Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health.
Without DORA, or any other kind of substance abuse treatment funding, the waiting lists will simply grow longer, Kelsey said.
E-mail: gfattah@desnews.com; lisa@desnews.com
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