$layout = "press_release";
$html_title = "Misdirected Spending Leaves Nation In Quandary";
$description = "Misdirected Spending Leaves Nation In Quandary";
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$body = <<Misdirected Spending
Leaves Nation in Quandary
The Sentencing Project by the
Justice Policy Institute reported in 2000 that with mass
releases of prisoners in Russia, the United States surged
ahead to have the highest incarceration rate in the world.
With 2,071,686 persons incarcerated in 2000, the United
States, with just 5% of the world's population, has roughly a
quarter of the world's prisoners.
Along with these hefty numbers
comes big bills. It cost Americans $25.96 billion to imprison
1.3 million non-violent offenders in the year 2000, meaning
our nation spent 50% more than the entire $16.6 billion the
federal government spent on welfare programs that serve 8.5
million people. What are the results of this spending other
than bigger and more prisons and jails with an
ever-increasing budget demand? What types of crimes are the
offenders being convicted of?
Sixty percent of the growth in
the federal prison population over the last twenty years has
been due to drug offender commitments. In states like
Oklahoma, where 43 percent of offenders in 2001 were
convicted of drug and alcohol crimes, the department of
corrections is seeking more funding while the state is having
to make budget cuts across the board.
There is an answer to this
quandary, and it's called effective rehabilitation and
prevention. With an average cost of nearly $30,000 per inmate
per year, multiple-year sentences add up, but with
rehabilitation in the fullest sense of the word, that money
can be spent on improving our nation's healthcare and
education. One such program that is continually producing
effective results throughout the world is the Narconon (R)
Program. Narconon literally means "narcotics-none" and was
founded by a former heroin addict named William Benitez in
Arizona State Prison in 1966. 36 years later, Narconon is
still considered a new, proven approach to ending addiction
through the drug rehabilitation methodology of L. Ron
Hubbard. This program is totally drug-free and it consists of
communication and confront exercises, sauna detoxification to
rid the body of the old drug residues and a series of courses
that empower former addicts through cognitive life skills
therapy. The practical workability of the Narconon(R)
Program's social education model continually achieves
extremely high success rates for helping individuals to
overcome their addiction and become happy, ethical and
productive members of society while remaining stably
drug-free.
Next
Story©2003 Narconon of
Oklahoma, Inc. All Rights Reserved. NARCONON is a registered
trademark and service mark owned by Association for Better
Living and Education International and is used with its
permission.
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