鈥淲e were never going to solve our problems just by locking people up,鈥 Hawaii County Prosecutor Mitch Roth told Civil Beat in July, noting that Hawaii鈥檚 prison system was already operating at capacity.
But if incarceration is not the answer to crime, what is?
Many criminals in the county鈥檚 jails and state prison system have substance abuse problems 鈥 if they didn鈥檛 commit crimes in order to get drugs or aren鈥檛 incarcerated for possession, then the drugs may have impaired their judgment. Getting them off drugs could help.
The good news is that Hawaii County has several good programs to help addicts kick their habits. The bad news: Like the prison system, they鈥檙e also overcrowded 鈥 especially residential programs that can get addicts off the street and into a 24-hour supportive environment.
鈥淰ery few beds are available for in-patient treatment island-wide,鈥 says Susan Volpe, a counselor at the Lokahi Treatment Center in Pahoa.
鈥淧atients for in-patient facilities must wait up to three months. Two or three facilities do detox, but other facilities want patients to come in clean.聽 If they could do that, they wouldn鈥檛 have to go there.鈥
Other experts and volunteers in the field said that drug treatment programs on the Big Island also faced shortages of psychiatrists and Certified Substance Abuse Counselors (CSACs).
The shortages have deep roots.
鈥淢ental health services since 2009 have been really challenging because of the shortages and cutbacks under the Lingle Administration at that time reduced funding for providers of services through the mental health division,鈥 notes Les Estrella, who heads Going Home Hawaii, a nonprofit consortium of agencies and organizations trying to help prisoners transition back to civilian life.
鈥淭hat resulted in higher rates of relapse and recidivism for persons with mental health issues in Hawaii County.鈥
It鈥檚 difficult to pin down statistics on the extent of the drug problem on the Big Island, but experts say it鈥檚 huge.
Volpe says the types of drugs vary with different communities. In Pahoa, she says, alcohol and crystal methamphetamine are prevalent, while in Hilo, it鈥檚 those two plus opiates. Meth is a special problem because it鈥檚 so cheap.
鈥淗eroin here on the island is $250-300 per gram, on the Hilo side. Kona-side it can go up to $500 per gram,鈥 says Volpe.
But methamphetamine, she says, is $20 a bag, and 鈥渁 $20 bag can last them a week. It鈥檚 a very inexpensive drug but has very heavy-duty consequences.鈥
Like many drug counselors, Volpe has seen the system from both sides.
鈥淚 was a user for 20 years of my life. So there鈥檚 hope for people,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to have a real nice support system. I didn鈥檛 start college till I was in my 40s because I was a user. Because I had support, people (that) believed in me, that made a huge difference.鈥
The problem for addicts is often compounded by the fact that addiction is seldom a stand-alone problem.
Estrella estimates that about 70 percent of addicts also have other mental health problems. And with the island鈥檚 shortage of psychiatrists to provide prescriptions for conditions such as depression or ADHD, some people may try to self-medicate with street drugs.
A variety of organizations offer addiction therapy programs on the island. The largest is the whose substance abuse and mental health programs include about a thousand patients annually, according to Dr. Hanna Preston-Pita, BISAC鈥檚 CEO.
About 60 percent of those clients, she says, are ordered into treatment by the courts.
The courts also refer offenders diagnosed with drug problems to other organizations, including , Access Capabilities, , and .聽 Many of these organizations also take voluntary clients.
Some addicts seek help from private psychiatrists or psychologists, or from Alcoholics Anonymous, which has and 鈥渋ntergroups鈥 on the island, or . Bridge House, in Kona, is one of the few facilities that offers residential treatment for both men and women.
A self-help group for Hawaiian men, offers addicts therapy and self-esteem through community service.
Most of these organizations offer therapy through outpatient counseling and support groups such as those that Volpe conducts at Lokahi Treatment Center, which also maintains offices for out-patient treatment throughout the island.
The route into such treatment is often through a judge.聽If someone鈥檚 already convicted of a crime, the courts can, and commonly do, make regular drug testing a condition of parole. Those who fail a drug test can be ordered into treatment or back to prison.
On the Big Island, as elsewhere in the state, treatment for parolees is often supervised by Drug Court, a system that claims very good results.
In a written response, John Laurence, the public information specialist for the Big Island Drug Court noted, 鈥渕ore than 253 people have graduated from the program and found success in their efforts to improve their lives. Statistics on recidivism (measured by criminal acts that resulted in re-arrest, reconviction, or return to prison with or without a new sentence) show that more than 90 percent have not been convicted of new felonies for up to three years after graduation from the program.鈥
But those claims may be inflated by two factors.
First, not everyone graduates from the Drug Court program. 聽Second, not everyone can get into the program. Laurence explained that potential recipients were screened out if they were suffering from certain mental health issues. The BIDC also does not take violent offenders.
So some of the highest risk offenders simply aren鈥檛 eligible for the program.
It鈥檚 also a relatively small program. The three Big Island drug courts鈥攊n Hilo, Kona and South Kohala鈥攈ave places for a total of 140 adult and 24 juvenile offenders.
Those who do get into the program are offered more than just support to get clean and sober.
According to Laurence, Drug Court participants get an integrated program that provides them with mental and medical follow-up and intense court supervision. It even makes sure that the program鈥檚 graduates get 鈥渞eliable transportation,鈥 acquire the equivalent of a high school diploma, find employment and work on improving family relationships.
Providing an integrated package of supports is one of the goals of goals of Going Home Hawaii. Every second Tuesday of each month in Hilo, they hold a general meeting that draws a broad range of state agency officials, service providers and concerned private citizens — 鈥漞verybody that touches anyone involved in the criminal justice system,鈥 Estrella said.
The group tries to 鈥渃ollaborate with different agencies so we have one island-wide system鈥 that addresses everything from drug treatment to housing to general health to jobs, he said.
The coalition also runs one of the island鈥檚 few residential programs: a safe place to stay while former prisoners seek employment and put their lives back together. In Kona, it contracts for beds with Hawaii Sober Living, and in Hilo, it has its own house leased from a faith-based organization.
The program is tiny, with only four beds on the Hilo side, but Estrella says they 鈥渉ope to expand that.鈥
The group puts a heavy emphasis on jobs鈥攁nother tough hurdle for both ex-cons and ex-addicts, but a key to reclaiming self-esteem and staying clean and sober. The coalition has developed partnerships with both government agencies such as Work Force Development and with Goodwill Industries and a number of local businesses.
With critical shortages of nearly everything, from residential beds to counselors and psychiatrists, those fighting addiction on the Big Island do have one thing going for them, believes Estrella.
鈥淲e work in partnership and collaborate with each other,” he said. “We鈥檙e actually a model that the state that has been looking at.”
A fundraiser for the group, he added, drew council members, five judges, 聽two wardens and Gov. David Ige.
If the coalition can extend the integrated approach that Drug Court uses, perhaps many more people could be kept out of prison.
But finding the funds and personnel to make such an approach succeed 鈥 and persuading addicts to use it before they end up in prison — remain major challenges.
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About the Author
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Alan D. McNarie has been covering the Big Island's people and issues for various publications for over a quarter century. He's published two novels: "Yeshua" and "The Soul Keys." He lives in Volcano. Email Alan at amcnarie@civilbeat.org