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National Hispanic
Caucus Of State
Legislators Support
A Resolution Calling
For A New Bottom
Line In Reducing The
Harms Of Drug Abuse
WHEREAS, the war on
drugs has failed:
despite spending
hundreds of billions
of taxpayer dollars
and incarcerating
millions of people,
illegal drugs remain
cheap, potent, and
widely available in
every community in
the United States.
Meanwhile, the harms
associated with drug
abuse – addiction;
overdose; the spread
of AIDS/HIV,
Hepatitis and other
diseases--continue
to mount, and;
WHEREAS, the war on
drugs is a major
force driving the
incarceration of
over 2.3 million
people in the U.S.—or
a quarter of the
world’s incarcerated
population—over half
of whom are
convicted of drug
offenses, with black,
Latino and poor
people
disproportionately
represented in our
country’s
overflowing jails
and prisons,[i] and;
WHEREAS, Americans
spend approximately
$140 billion
annually on prisons
and jails including
$24 billion spent on
incarcerating over
1.2 million non-violent
offenders. In many
states (such as New
York, Texas, and
California),
spending on prisons
far surpasses
spending on
education, primarily
and dramatically
affecting young
Latinos and other
people of color, and;
WHEREAS, Latinos
comprise
approximately 14.4%
of the general
population[ii] and
13.9% of yearly
reported illicit
drug users[iii], yet
among people
convicted of drug
offenses, 42.6% are
Latino[iv]. In 2001,
the chances of going
to prison were
nearly three times
higher for Latino
males (17.2%) than
white males
(5.9%)[v], and drug
offenders made up
nearly twice the
percentage of Latino
State inmates
(27.4%) than of
white State inmates
(14.8%), and;
WHEREAS, the drug
war has devastated
Latino families,
women and youth.
Latino youth are 13
times more likely to
enter the juvenile
justice system as a
result of a drug
offense, are
incarcerated for
more than twice the
amount of time for
similar drug
offenses[vi], and
are nearly four
times more likely to
have an incarcerated
parent as are white
youth.[vii] In 2004,
Latinas were
arrested at four and
a half times the
rate of white women
in the U.S.[viii],
and;
WHEREAS, injection
drug use is the
number-two cause of
all Latino HIV/AIDS
infections, which
comprised 18% of all
cases diagnosed in
the U.S. in 2004,
and 20% of all
reported cases in
the U.S. since the
beginning of the
epidemic, now in its
25th year.[ix]
Despite all the
advances in AIDS
treatment, AIDS is
still among the top
five leading causes
of death for Latinos
aged 25-54 and more
than half of these
deaths were caused
by contaminated
syringes, and;[x]
WHEREAS, access to
affordable,
community-based drug
treatment, along
with educational and
economic
opportunities, have
shown to be
successful at
reducing the harms
of drug misuse, yet
more than half of
those Americans—and
26.5% of
Latinos[xi]--in need
of drug treatment do
not have access to
it, particularly
Latinos and Latinas
living in poor urban
or rural areas, and;
WHEREAS, state
policies reducing
the incarceration of
non-violent
offenders and
increasing the
availability of
treatment are
cost-effective and
beneficial to Latino
communities in many
states: nearly a
third (31%) of all
clients enrolled in
California’s
treatment instead of
incarceration
program are Latinos,
roughly
proportionate to
their usage and
population
levels[xii].
Conversely, Latinos
are significantly
underrepresented in
drug courts in
Texas, despite being
incarcerated at
nearly twice the
rate of
whites[xiii], and
nationwide, only 36%
of Latinos in
federal prisons
receive any form
substance abuse
treatment, the least
likely of any
racial/ethnic
group[xiv], and;
WHEREAS, Latinos are
important
contributors to our
democracy and
economy yet are
disproportionately
disenfranchised
because of prior
felony drug
convictions—severely
diluting Latino
political
participation and
voting strength—and
are denied public
housing, benefits,
and student
loans—adding further
burdens to Latino
families and
students, and;
WHEREAS, nearly 40%
of all criminal
deportation
proceedings in the
U.S.—or the removal
of over 33,000 legal
residents and
undocumented
immigrants—are a
result of a drug
conviction,
including minor
possession offenses
that can trigger
automatic
deportation and
carry a lifetime ban
on reentry,
permanently
separating husband
from wife, parent
from child, and
destroying many
Latino families,
especially those
with mixed
documentation
status, and;[xv]
WHEREAS, there is
not one but rather
many Hispanic
communities
throughout the
United States, all
of which face
different challenges
of substance abuse.
Individual states
therefore require
flexibility in
serving the needs of
each of these
communities.
Now, therefore, be
it resolved, that
the National
Hispanic Caucus of
State Legislators
(“NHCSL”) will
introduce and
support legislation
that prioritizes a
public health, not a
criminal justice,
approach to drug
policy, and is
measured by a
standard that
reduces the harms of
both drug abuse and
unjust drug policies
within our
communities, while
increasing public
safety, thereby
creating a New
Bottom Line. At a
minimum, such a
standard should
include reducing
drug overdoses, the
spread of HIV/AIDS
and Hepatitis, the
number of nonviolent
drug offenders
behind bars, and the
racial disparities
created or
exacerbated by the
criminal justice
system.
Be it further
resolved, that the
NHCSL calls for
immediate changes in
U.S. drug policies
which will: reduce
over-incarceration,
racial disparities,
civil liberties
abuses, and the
destruction of
families by
repealing mandatory
minimum sentences
and diverting
nonviolent drug
offenders out of
prison and into
community-based
treatment programs;
remove barriers on
access to sterile
injecting equipment
as well as to drug
treatment on request
that includes
methadone and other
alternative
maintenance drugs;
provide fully
funded, bilingual
drug education,
prevention and
treatment services
for Latinos and
other communities of
color; report on the
allocation of local,
state, and federal
expenditures for all
public education and
health services as
well as the war on
drugs, so that
states can
understand the real
cost of the war on
drugs to their
budgets and their
communities; and
give states the
flexibility they
need to find the
most effective way
to deal with drugs
while saving
taxpayer dollars and
keeping their
communities safe.
This resolution was
adopted this
November 18, 2006,
at the National
Hispanic Caucus of
State Legislators
Executive Committee
& BBA Annual Meeting
held in San Juan,
Puerto Rico.
Assemblyman Felix W.
Ortiz, NY
NHCSL President
Notes:
[i] United
States Department of
Justice, Bureau of
Justice Statistics
Bulletin. Prison and
Jail Inmates at
Midyear 2005. May
2006.
[ii] U.S. Census
Bureau, Quick Facts,
2004.
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/00000.html.
[iii] Substance
Abuse and Mental
Health Services
Agency (SAMHSA),
Office of Applied
Studies. National
Survey on drug Use
and Health (NSDUH),
2005. September
2006, Table G.11
[iv]Arboleda,
Angela. Latinos in
the Federal Criminal
Justice System.
National Council of
La Raza (NCLR).
Statistical Brief,
No.1: July 2002.
[v] Bonczar, Thomas
P., US Department of
Justice, Bureau of
Justice Statistics,
"Prevalence of
Imprisonment in the
US Population,
1974-2001,"
NCJ197976
(Washington DC: US
Department of
Justice, August
2003), p. 8
[vi] About Minority
Over-representation.
Governor Ted
Kulongoski’s Summit
on the
Over-representation
of Minorities in the
Juvenile Justice
System. Available
at:
http://www.oya.state.or.us/dmc/minovrep.htm
[vii] Mumola,
Christopher J., US
Department of
Justice Bureau of
Justice Statistics,
Incarcerated Parents
and Their Children
(Washington, DC: US
Department of
Justice, August
2000), p. 2
[viii] Harrison,
Paige M., & Allen J.
Beck, Bureau of
Justice Statistics,
Prison and Jail
Inmates at Midyear
2004 (Washington,
DC: US Dept. of
Justice, April
2005), p. 11
[ix] Department of
Health and Human
Services. Center for
Disease Control and
Prevention. HIV/AIDS
among Hispanics.
June 2006.
www.cdc.gov/hiv/resources/factsheets/hispanic.htm
[x]Dawn Day, Ph.D.,
Health Emergency
2003: The Spread of
Drug-Related AIDS
and Hepatitis C
among African
Americans and
Latinos (The Dogwood
Center: Princeton,
NJ, 2002), p. i.
[xi]Margarita
Alegria, et al..
Improving drug
treatment services
for Hispanics:
research gaps and
scientific
opportunities
[xii] UCLA News
Release.
http://alcoholism.about.com/cs/meth/a/blucla030719.htm.
[xiii] Russel,
Malik. Press
Release: Race and
Imprisonment in
Texas. Justice
Policy Institute.
February 24, 2005.
http://www.justicepolicy.org/article.php?id=483.
[xiv]U.S. Department
of Justice, Bureau
of Justice
Statistics.
Correctional
Populations in the
United States, 1997.
November 2000.
[xv] Immigration
Enforcement Actions:
2004, Department of
Homeland Security
Office of
Immigration
Statistics Annual
Report, p.6 Table 4 |