California Sees Greatest Drop In Drug Prisoners Among Large State Prison Systems
The Justice Policy Institute issued findings today about Prop 36, the California ballot initiative that mandated non-violent drug offenders be offered the opportunity for treatment before incarceration.
Some of the key findings by researchers are:The ballot initiative's funding expires this year, so we should be hearing more about the outcomes of the initiative in the coming months. There was a lot of criticism 5 years ago, but I hear much less now. Hopefully this experiment will provide a path out of the war on drugs.
- The rate of incarceration for drug-possession offenses has gone from 89 per 100,000 California adults in December 2000 to 58 in December 2005Âa 34.3 percent decrease.
- While opponents of the initiative warned that Proposition 36 might lead to an increase in violent crime, CaliforniaÂs violent crime rate has declined since 2000 at a rate higher than the national average.
- Since 2000, spending on drug treatment in California doubled.
- Since 2000, California has experienced a larger increase in drug treatment clients than the rest of the country.
- Proposition 36 and drug court completion rates are comparable.
- The effectiveness of using incarceration to prevent drug use and treatment relapse is not conclusive.
- Proposition 36 is saving the state hundreds of millions of dollars.

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