Santa Fe New Mexican

Study shows drug program results are promising

- By Morgan Lee

A study released Thursday shows an initial reduction in arrests and other promising results from a pioneering drug treatment program in New Mexico in which police refer nonviolent drug users to comprehens­ive counseling and social services instead of arresting them.

In 2014, Santa Fe became the second city in the nation after Seattle to implement the police-assisted diversion program for drug users that has since been adopted in at least 18 jurisdicti­ons nationwide, with more preparing for launch.

The evaluation by the New Mexico Sentencing Commission and the University of New Mexico found a roughly 30 percent decrease in arrests during the first

six months among drug users diverted to the program when compared with the prior six months.

The decrease in arrests did not last over a longer period of time, a pattern that advocates for the program said might be linked to a gradual reduction in attention to treatment.

Emily Kaltenbach, a member of the program’s oversight committee and state director for the Drug Policy Alliance, called the evaluation results encouragin­g and noted indication­s of cost savings over incarcerat­ion-based strategies.

Diversion program participan­ts had no subsequent violent-crime charges, the evaluation said.

“I feel like we’re on the right track,” Kaltenbach said. “Sometimes people do drop off. … We need to be working much closer, the case management workers and law enforcemen­t officers, to identify who may not be engaged, to go find them on the streets.”

Abstinence from drug use is not required of diversion-program participan­ts in Santa Fe and jurisdicti­ons following the same “harm reduction” model.

The guiding principle favors investment­s in treatment and services for low-level drug offenders over arrest and prosecutio­n, but little data have been available to gauge the effectiven­ess of the programs.

Political support for the diversion program in Santa Fe was on display Thursday at a news conference attended by Mayor Alan Webber, District Attorney Marco Serna and police Chief Andrew Padilla — who all inherited the initiative from predecesso­rs.

“We can’t arrest and incarcerat­e our way out of the opioid epidemic,” said Serna, who hopes the diversion program can be expanded throughout the state.

State employee Denise Herrera testified that the diversion program had provided a dignified way out of heroin use and toward a productive life for her 33-yearold son, a father of three.

Police in Santa Fe have referred 177 people to the program. The study tracked results among 76 participan­ts and interviewe­d a smaller group of 24 for their impression­s.

Those interviews indicated a reduction in heroin use, more people in permanent housing, and improvemen­ts in several measures of well-being and mental health.

Santa Fe program manager Shelly Moeller said in a statement that more time is needed to adapt the program and meet initial goals, especially for opioid users who are prone to repeated relapses on their way to sobriety.

 ?? MORGAN LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denise Herrera, left, speaks about a drug treatment program in which police refer nonviolent drug users into comprehens­ive counseling and services Thursday in Santa Fe. Next to her is New Mexico Chief Public Defender Bennett Baur. An evaluation of Santa Fe’s program has implicatio­ns for more than a dozen jurisdicti­ons that have adopted similar approaches. Herrera says Santa Fe’s program helped her son emerge from heroin addiction.
MORGAN LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Denise Herrera, left, speaks about a drug treatment program in which police refer nonviolent drug users into comprehens­ive counseling and services Thursday in Santa Fe. Next to her is New Mexico Chief Public Defender Bennett Baur. An evaluation of Santa Fe’s program has implicatio­ns for more than a dozen jurisdicti­ons that have adopted similar approaches. Herrera says Santa Fe’s program helped her son emerge from heroin addiction.

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