Supporters of Proposition 36, a tough-on-crime measure California voters overwhelmingly approved in November, pitched it as an urgent solution to compel people struggling with addiction off the street and into treatment.
Yet, in the four months since the measure took effect, no one charged with drug possession under the new law has been sent to an addiction program in either of the Bay Area’s two largest counties.
Officials in Santa Clara and Alameda counties say it’s still too early to gauge Prop 36’s ultimate impact. But they warn that a shortage of treatment options, coupled with the law’s “clunky and time-consuming legal processes,” are creating barriers to achieving its goals of addressing voters’ growing frustrations over homelessness and public drug use.
“It’s a little disappointing that we haven’t gotten anyone in treatment, but the law is not really designed for streamlined treatment, so it hasn’t,” said David Angel, an assistant district attorney in Santa Clara County, at a public safety committee hearing last week.
So far, the county district attorney’s office — which raised similar concerns about Prop 36 before its passage — has used the measure to bring felony drug charges against at least 62 people.
In Alameda County, meanwhile, the public defender’s office said it had received just one drug case charged under the law. The district attorney’s office there did not respond to questions about its charging decisions.
Prop 36 empowers prosecutors to charge anyone caught with drugs or stealing property of any value more than twice with a felony, undoing part of a landmark crime reform measure voters approved in 2014 that had lowered those crimes to misdemeanors.
The new law also created a “treatment-mandated felony,” which allows judges to order repeat drug offenders into treatment or sentence them to up to three years in jail or prison if they decline to enter a program. Courts have long offered such diversion deals, but the stiffer penalties are meant to push people into treatment who otherwise wouldn’t accept it.
District attorneys have broad discretion over whether to bring drug or theft charges under Prop 36, meaning the law is playing out differently in counties across the state. In Orange County, for example, prosecutors have already filed around 1,200 treatment-mandated felonies. As of earlier this month, however, only 135 people had accepted treatment, and it was unclear how many had enrolled in programs.
Even as counties take different approaches to enforcing the law, there’s broad agreement that Prop 36 is unlikely to succeed without more money to ensure treatment is available for those who agree to it. The measure provides no funding for addiction programs or the new court processes it mandates. And there’s concern it could slash existing dollars earmarked for treatment as the state spends more to lock people up.
In an interview, Alameda County Public Defender Brendon Woods argued the lack of funding reveals it was never Prop 36’s intention to get people into treatment, especially since there already are too few options for drug users who actively want help.
“This measure was never, ever about treatment,” he said. “It was about incarceration.”
Although few people appear to be facing treatment-mandated felonies in Alameda County, Woods said his office received 64 theft cases under the new law during its first three months. In Santa Clara County, at least 51 people had been charged with Prop 36 theft felonies, according to the district attorney’s office.
To address the funding challenges, Republican lawmakers have proposed setting aside $400 million a year to support Prop 36. However, more money would go toward law enforcement and probation programs than to drug treatment. Democrats, meanwhile, have proposed a bill to track costs related to treatment-mandated felonies.
Another roadblock, Santa Clara County prosecutors say, is what they describe as the complicated process for referring a Prop 36 defendant to treatment. To enroll in a program, offenders must first go through multiple hearings and an in-depth assessment by an addiction expert, officials said.
The county behavioral health department, which is responsible for assessments and placing most people in treatment, said it’s phasing in the process gradually to ensure successful outcomes for program participants. As of last week, it had yet to receive a referral.
Sarah McCarthy, an assistant public defender in Santa Clara County, said many of her office’s Prop 36 clients are turning down treatment because, with so few options available, there’s no timeline for how long they may wait in custody even after they’ve been cleared for a program.
Defendants entering treatment must also first plead guilty to the felony charge, which is wiped away only after completing a program. McCarthy told county officials at last week’s public safety hearing that means if someone relapses — a common part of recovery — they could be stuck with the guilty plea and face a lengthy jail sentence.
She said some defendants may instead elect to fight the charge or seek a plea deal, a frequent outcome in criminal cases.
“Maybe there’s a credit-for-time-served, get-out-today offer on the table,” she said.
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Finally We wish PressBee provided you with enough information of ( Prop 36 is supposed to force drug offenders into treatment. That’s yet to happen in these Bay Area counties )
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