ONDCP Report Released Today -- DPA Says
They Use "Fuzzy Math"
from:
Drug Policy Alliance
www.drugpolicy.org
re: WHITE
HOUSE DRUG CZAR RELEASES NATIONAL DRUG CONTROL STRATEGY

ODNCP Chief John P. Walters
posted at DrugWar.com
February 12, 2003
Drug Czars Office Masks True Costs of
War on Drugs in Federal Budget Released Today
Drug Policy Alliance Denounces Fuzzy
Math in New ONDCP Report
Drug Czar Excludes Incarceration and Law Enforcement
Costs from 2003 Count, Falsely Announcing Smaller
Total to Congress
Using new accounting procedures, this years
White House Drug Strategy, released today, looks different from
past years, with little actual change. This years drug strategy
for the first time ever conceals billions of dollars spent on
incarcerating drug offenders and certain law enforcement efforts
by excluding these categories from the budget, while including
inflated expenditures on treatment services. Recent polling by
Peter Hart Research Associates shows that nearly two-thirds of
Americans want treatment, not incarceration, for nonviolent drug
offenders. The 2003 Drug Strategy plays to this public sentiment
by appearing as if its focused on treatment, but in reality
its perpetuating the same reliance on law enforcement and
interdiction as ever.
The drug war has always been a money
pit, but this is fuzzy math at its worst, said Ethan Nadelmann,
executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, the nations
leading organization promoting alternatives to the war on drugs.
Americans cry out for less incarceration and more drug treatment,
so the drug czar tries to make the administration look compassionate
when its not. Were getting the same punitive, draconian
policies as ever does he really think well fall for
it?
An analysis of the new budget numbers revealed
that by hiding the costs of incarceration, military activities
and other known costs of the drug war, the Office of National
Drug Control Policy was able to bring their enforcement to treatment
ratios more into line with public sentiment. Last year, the Office
stated it spent 33% of the drug war budget on drug treatment and
prevention activities while 67% went to law enforcement and interdiction.
This year, despite making no substantive spending changes, the
Office claims to be spending 47% on drug treatment and only 53%
on law enforcement activities. In addition, the office appears
to inflate its numbers by including alcohol treatment which by
law is specifically excluded from their scope of responsibilities.
The White Houses 2003 National Drug
Control Strategy is deceptive in numerous ways:
· The Drug Czar Distorts the True
Cost of the Federal Drug War
The new 2003 Drug Strategy shows the federal
government spending only about $11 billion dollars a year, when
the real cost (more accurately reflected in last years drug
strategy) is around $20 billion. ONDCP said it will not count
drug war expenditures by many law enforcement agencies, while
acknowledging that these agencies will remain focused on drug
control efforts.
· The Drug Czar Distorts the Amount
Spent on Treatment vs. the Amount Spent on Law Enforcement
By reducing reported law enforcement costs,
eliminating reported prison costs, and artificially boosting reported
drug treatment expenditures, ONDCP Director John Walters attempts
to make the drug war look more compassionate. Although the actual
drug war budget maintains focused on supply reduction (with nearly
70 percent of the budget), the new drug strategy makes the assertion
that spending is almost split evenly between supply and demand
efforts. This distortion makes the drug war look more humane,
and makes it harder for drug treatment and prevention groups to
advocate for needed additional funding.
· The Drug Czar Stops Counting the
Cost of Imprisoning Nonviolent Drug Offenders
ONDCP reduces the official estimate of federal
drug war costs by eliminating agencies that mainly focus
on the consequences associated with the activities of other primary
counterdrug agencies. This means, among other things, not
counting the costs of imprisoning federal nonviolent drug offenders
at about $3 billion a year. According to the ONDCP, Although
these [prison costs] are real costs to society, they do not factor
into the core of drug law enforcement decisions made by national
policymakers. Yet these costs result directly from federal
drug war policies.
· The Drug Czar Appears to Over-Report
Treatment Expenditures
Although ONDCP stops counting many law enforcement
expenses, it appears to continue counting many drug treatment
and prevention expenses for agencies not actually involved
in drug war efforts. It may also fraudulently increase the amount
of federal drug treatment expenditures reported to Congress and
the public by counting money spent reducing alcohol abuse, even
though ONDCPs charter specifically excludes alcohol from
its scope of responsibilities.
These changes are especially alarming
because they leave Members of Congress and the American public
without accurate information about the real costs of the failed
war on drugs, said Nadelmann. Computing the drug war
budget without incarceration is like computing the Defense budget
without soldiers. Thats far fetched, even by Washington
standards.
For More Information, please contact Drug
Policy Alliance:
Tony Newman,
510-208-7711
or Shayna Samuels,
646-523-6961