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Breaking drug and crime link 'a costly failure'

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Published Date: 13 May 2009
PILOT schemes designed to break the link between crime and drug abuse are to be wound up after they were found to be an expensive failure.
About 15,000 people were expected to be targeted under £3 million "mandatory drug testing of arrestees" schemes in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen.

The pilot schemes were designed to test all people arrested for drugs, with those testing positive then being encouraged to engage with available treatment services.

But an evaluation has found that only 3,300 people were tested during the two-year pilot, and of those, only 223 went into treatment.

Justice secretary Kenny MacAskill yesterday announced that the pilots, due to end next month, had "failed to meet expectations". He added: "We have decided to provide further central funding of the pilots for an additional three-month period only to assist with transitional arrangements.

"By not extending central funding to the pilots any further, we will ensure these resources remain in programmes focused on community sentences. Arrest referral schemes, which have similar objectives but entail voluntary engagement on the part of the arrestee, were found to be more cost-effective."





The full article contains 197 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 12 May 2009 11:40 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Drugs policy
 
1

yockel,

13/05/2009 08:24:35
How many tested positive though? Surely that is a bit of information worth knowing even if "treatment" is a daft leftist get out.
2

SandyBottoms,

Edinburgh 13/05/2009 10:04:24
Sounds to me like the police are loath to waste time and money testing for drugs in people who don't look like they've been using or for crimes that shouldn't have anything to do with drugs. Wow! Common sense! Respect for privacy! At least MacAskill is listening to the results.

 

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