Proposed Texas Bill Would Block Drug Offenders from Certain Neighborhoods
Saturday, January 15, 2005 at 03:01AM
TheSpook
A measure introduced in the Texas Legislature would allow the City of
San Antonio to prohibit people arrested for drug offenses from entering
certain parts of the city except to go directly to their homes and
places of employment, according to a press release from the Drug Policy
Alliance. "What we're trying to do is put these drug dealers out of the
city of San Antonio," said the author of the bill, State Representative
Ruth Jones McClendon (D-San Antonio). McClendon's bill focuses on areas
that have a significantly higher number of arrests for drug offenses
than other areas. The law would ban people who had been arrested for a
drug offense, even if they were not convicted, for 90 days. People who
have been convicted would be excluded for one year. However, "The vast
majority of people arrested for drug offenses in San Antonio are
arrested for marijuana possession," said Michael Blain, director of
public policy for the Drug Policy Alliance. "They're not dealers or
addicts. And for the minority who are, this bill will do more harm than
good. Someone who has a substance abuse problem needs treatment and
reintegration into the community -- both of which are proven to reduce
recidivism. They don't need isolation." Critics also say that this
strategy will impact communities of color disproportionately. Despite
nearly equal drug use rates across racial lines, African Americans in
Texas go to jail at twelve times the rate than whites. "This law is
discriminatory," said Blain. "While drug use is widespread throughout
society, law enforcement focuses on African American and Latino
communities. The bill also flies in the face of our most democratic
principle of being innocent until proven guilty by condemning people
solely on the basis of arrest." [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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