REPORT TITLE:
Drug treatment


DESCRIPTION:
Establishes an interagency coordinating body to mandate probation
and drug treatment of first time drug offenders.  (SD1)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
                                                        
THE SENATE                              S.B. NO.           2435
TWENTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2000                                S.D. 1
STATE OF HAWAII                                            
                                                             
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________


                     A BILL FOR AN ACT

RELATING TO SUBSTANCE ABUSE.



BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

 1      SECTION 1.  The legislature finds:
 
 2      (1)  A growing body of research demonstrates the destructive
 
 3           impact of alcohol and other substance abuse on personal
 
 4           health and health care costs, the spread of
 
 5           communicable disease, educational performance and
 
 6           attainment, work force participation, safety and
 
 7           productivity in the workplace, and financial stability.
 
 8           These indicators of social erosion are in turn related
 
 9           to crime in many obvious but hard to measure ways.
 
10           Given the recognized relationship between crime and
 
11           substance abuse and addiction, it is necessary and
 
12           appropriate to use, adapt, and expand the resources and
 
13           remedies available within the criminal justice system
 
14           to address the problem of substance abuse dependency
 
15           and thereby to help reduce the demand for illicit drugs
 
16           and the incidence of drug-related crimes.
 
17      (2)  Studies, such as the drug use forecasting studies
 
18           conducted by the National Institute of Justice, reveal
 
19           that a large percentage of persons arrested for both
 
20           drug and nondrug offenses (such as thefts, burglaries,
 

 
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 1           robberies, assaults, rapes, and homicides) test
 
 2           positive for recent drug use.  Many offenses are
 
 3           committed by adults who are under the influence of a
 
 4           controlled substance or alcohol or are committed in
 
 5           order to raise revenues to support the person's drug
 
 6           habit.  Some mind and mood altering drugs, moreover, 
 
 7           seem to induce criminal and often violent behavior,
 
 8           reducing the person's inhibitions as well as the
 
 9           person's ability to anticipate future consequences,
 
10           thereby undermining the deterrent thrust of the
 
11           criminal law.  Some drugs also may reduce an offender's
 
12           ability to empathize with a potential victim, resulting
 
13           in episodes of seemingly mindless violence.  Finally,
 
14           some crimes, including crimes of violence, are
 
15           committed in the normal course of conducting illicit
 
16           drug businesses and enterprises.  These include strong
 
17           arm robberies and "rip-offs", violent retaliations for
 
18           these offenses, and efforts to protect markets and
 
19           "turf" by means of intimidation and terrorism directed
 
20           against would-be competitors and drug purchasers who
 
21           patronize competing drug distributors.
 
22      (3)  Research has demonstrated that substance abuse and
 
23           addiction is treatable within the offender population
 

 
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 1           and that appropriate actions by criminal justice
 
 2           professionals can foster the effectiveness of
 
 3           treatment.  This research further demonstrates that the
 
 4           effectiveness of substance abuse treatment is directly
 
 5           related to the length of stay in treatment.  The threat
 
 6           of criminal justice sanctions, in turn, can be used to
 
 7           motivate offenders to enter treatment and stay in
 
 8           treatment for as long as necessary to effect positive
 
 9           change.  To achieve this change, treatment must be of
 
10           sufficient duration and intensity, must be supported by
 
11           periodic comprehensive drug testing to maintain program
 
12           integrity, must be provided by professional staff who
 
13           have received adequate training and who continue to
 
14           receive training and adequate supervision, and must
 
15           provide for the continued collection and analysis of
 
16           program data to allow for both process and impact
 
17           evaluation.  Moreover, the drug and alcohol treatment
 
18           programs must be accredited by the department of health
 
19           and must be appropriate in type, duration, and
 
20           intensity based upon the length and level of treatment
 
21           derived from an alcohol and other drug assessment of
 
22           each individual's needs, balanced with the public's
 
23           right to protection.
 

 
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 1      (4)  Few addicts voluntarily seek help for a substance abuse
 
 2           problem.  Many drug dependent persons deny that they
 
 3           have a problem.  Consequently, the decision to
 
 4           participate in treatment typically is the result of
 
 5           pressure brought to bear by other persons, including
 
 6           family members, friends, co-workers, employers, medical
 
 7           and health care professionals, school officials,
 
 8           courts, or law enforcement agencies.  Since a
 
 9           substantial percentage of referrals for substance abuse
 
10           treatment come from law enforcement agencies, the law
 
11           enforcement community acts as a major point of entry to
 
12           the substance abuse treatment system.  It is in the
 
13           public interest to use the coercive powers of the law
 
14           enforcement community and their jurisdiction over
 
15           persons charged with committing crimes to
 
16           constructively influence substance abusing and addicted
 
17           offenders and to provide strong incentives for these
 
18           offenders to accept help and to participate and remain
 
19           as long as necessary in meaningful treatment and
 
20           monitoring programs.
 
21      (5)  Most addicted offenders who are convicted of serious
 
22           crimes and who are sentenced to terms of imprisonment
 
23           will eventually be released back into the community on
 

 
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 1           parole or at the expiration of their sentences.
 
 2           Without proper treatment, an offender is likely to
 
 3           continue to be drug dependent and to commit new
 
 4           offenses, resulting in further injury to victims, loss
 
 5           of property, and the expenditure of limited resources
 
 6           to identify, apprehend, prosecute, and return the
 
 7           offender to confinement.  Under these circumstances,
 
 8           the overriding need to protect the public safety
 
 9           requires that all substance abusing and addicted
 
10           offenders receive appropriate treatment and monitoring
 
11           services, based on the individual's need as determined
 
12           by an alcohol and other drug assessment, either in lieu
 
13           of or during the course of traditional imprisonment,
 
14           and continue to receive needed treatment or appropriate
 
15           aftercare, support, or monitoring services as a
 
16           condition of parole or other release from confinement.
 
17      (6)  Persons charged with repeat offenses who actively abuse
 
18           or are addicted to a controlled substance or alcohol
 
19           and who are not undergoing appropriate treatment and
 
20           monitoring pose a proportionately greater risk of
 
21           criminal recidivism. 
 
22      (7)  To ensure uniformity and the best possible use of
 
23           limited resources, the department of health must
 

 
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 1           develop and enforce accreditation and operational
 
 2           standards for all programs, whether public or private,
 
 3           that provide substance abuse assessment services or
 
 4           treatment services to adults who are repeat offenders
 
 5           who are inmates in correctional centers and facilities.
 
 6      (8)  For treatment and intervention services to be most
 
 7           effective, alcohol and other drug abusing and addicted
 
 8           offenders must be assured that information provided
 
 9           during the course of treatment and counseling will be
 
10           kept confidential in accordance with 42 United States
 
11           Code section 290dd-2 and 42 C.F.R. Part 2, which govern
 
12           the confidentiality of alcohol and other drug abuse
 
13           treatment records.  Without these protections, an
 
14           offender in need of alcohol and other drug treatment
 
15           services may be discouraged from constructively
 
16           engaging in the treatment process.  Preserving the
 
17           confidentiality of treatment information and records is
 
18           consistent with the vital goal of holding alcohol and
 
19           other drug abusing and addicted offenders fully
 
20           accountable for their past and future actions.
 
21      The purpose of this Act is to mandate a substance abuse
 
22 assessment and treatment program for all inmates in correctional
 
23 centers and facilities, who are alcohol or drug dependent, or who
 

 
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 1 are otherwise in need of substance abuse treatment and
 
 2 monitoring.  It is the intent of this Act to hold substance
 
 3 abusing offenders accountable for their past and future actions
 
 4 by means of an effective combination of rewards, threats, and
 
 5 swiftly imposed punishments and sanctions designed to take full
 
 6 advantage of the coercive influence of the criminal justice
 
 7 system.
 
 8      SECTION 2.  Chapter 353G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
 
 9 amended by adding two new sections to be appropriately designated
 
10 and to read as follows:
 
11      "§353G-    Interagency coordination.  (a)  To carry out
 
12 their responsibilities under chapter 353G, the department of
 
13 public safety, Hawaii paroling authority, judiciary, department
 
14 of health, department of human services, and any other agency
 
15 assigned oversight responsibilities for offender substance abuse
 
16 treatment by law or administrative order, shall establish, by an
 
17 interagency cooperative agreement, a coordinating body to oversee
 
18 the development and implementation of offender substance abuse
 
19 treatment programs in the State to ensure compliance with the
 
20 intent of the master plan developed under chapter 353G.  The
 
21 interagency cooperative agreement shall set forth the role of the
 
22 coordinating body and the responsibilities of each agency that is
 
23 a party to the agreement.
 

 
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 1      (b)  The department of public safety shall be the lead
 
 2 agency for the statewide offender substance abuse treatment
 
 3 program.  As the lead agency, the department shall act as
 
 4 facilitator of the coordinating body by providing administrative
 
 5 support to the coordinating body.
 
 6      (c)  Notwithstanding any other provision to the contrary,
 
 7 any agency that is part of the interagency cooperative agreement
 
 8 shall, upon the request of any other participating agency,
 
 9 provide all medical, psychological, or mental health records of
 
10 any offender receiving supervision or treatment while under the
 
11 jurisdiction of the State.  Any participating agency receiving
 
12 such records of any offender receiving supervision or treatment
 
13 while under the jurisdiction of the State, shall keep that
 
14 information confidential in accordance with the requirements of
 
15 42 United States Code section 290dd-2.
 
16      §353G-    Drug treatment.  The department of public safety
 
17 may order an inmate to participate in treatment for drug or
 
18 alcohol dependency if the inmate has been recommended for
 
19 substance abuse treatment as the result of a drug assessment
 
20 performed pursuant to section 353G-5."
 
21      SECTION 3.  Section 353G-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes is
 
22 amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
 

 
 
 
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 1      "[[]§353G-3[]]  Mandatory drug testing of [repeat
 
 2 offenders.] felons.  (a)  Any inmate who has been convicted of
 
 3 [an offense] a felony under chapter 329, 329C, 707, 708, 709,
 
 4 710, 711, or 712, [and has one prior conviction under any of
 
 5 these chapters,] shall be required to submit to drug testing."
 
 6      SECTION 4.  Section 353G-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
 
 7 amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
 
 8      "[[]§353G-4[]]  Mandatory assessment of [offenders.] felons.
 
 9 (a)  Any inmate who has been convicted of [more than one offense]
 
10 a felony under chapter 329, 329C, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, or
 
11 712, [and has one prior conviction under any of these chapters,]
 
12 shall be required to undergo an assessment if:
 
13      (1)  The inmate refuses to undergo a drug test required
 
14           under section 353G-3;
 
15      (2)  The results of the drug test conducted pursuant to
 
16           section 353G-3 reveal the presence of a controlled
 
17           substance, for which the inmate has no lawful
 
18           prescription, or reveals alcohol abuse or dependency;
 
19      (3)  The inmate requests an assessment;
 
20      (4)  The inmate admits to the unlawful use of a controlled
 
21           substance within the year preceding the conviction for
 
22           the present charge or admits to alcohol abuse or
 
23           alcoholism;
 

 
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 1      (5)  The inmate has been granted a conditional discharge
 
 2           within the past five years pursuant to section 712-1255
 
 3           or any similar or predecessor law of this State, any
 
 4           other state, or federal law;
 
 5      (6)  The inmate has been sentenced within the past five
 
 6           years to probation or treatment during incarceration
 
 7           pursuant to this chapter or any predecessor law of this
 
 8           State, any other state, or federal law; or
 
 9      (7)  The present or pending charge involved the use or
 
10           possession of a controlled substance or alcohol."
 
11      SECTION 5.  Section 353G-5 Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
 
12 amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
 
13      "(c)  Anyone receiving drug test results or assessment
 
14 results under subsection (a) shall keep that information
 
15 confidential in accordance with the requirements of 42 United
 
16 States code section [290dd-3.] 290dd-2."
 
17      SECTION 6.  Section 353G-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
 
18 amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
 
19      "(b)  Except as provided by law, an assessment shall be used
 
20 only for the purposes listed in subsection (a)(2) or (a)(3), to
 
21 provide information to a court in sentencing a defendant, and to
 
22 provide background information about an inmate to any person or
 
23 agency conducting a prerelease assessment pursuant to section
 
24 353G-4."
 

 
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 1      SECTION 7.  Section 353G-16, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
 
 2 amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
 
 3      "(a)  The department of public safety, with the assistance
 
 4 of the department of health[, may] and the attorney general,
 
 5 shall pursue all available funding through federal, state and
 
 6 local government programs [and] or private sources.  [Contingent
 
 7 upon the receipt of sufficient funds, the department of public
 
 8 safety may implement the assessment and treatment services
 
 9 mandated pursuant to this chapter.  If at any time funds are not
 
10 available, the department may not be required to provide these
 
11 services.]  In addition, the department of public safety, in
 
12 conjunction with the department of health, may pursue all
 
13 available federal matching funds through medicaid for nonhospital
 
14 residential alcohol and other drug treatment services from the
 
15 United States Health Care Financing Administration."
 
16      SECTION 8.  Section 92F-14, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
 
17 amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
 
18      "(b)  The following are examples of information in which the
 
19 individual has a significant privacy interest:
 
20      (1)  Information relating to medical, psychiatric, or
 
21           psychological history, diagnosis, condition, treatment,
 
22           or evaluation, other than directory information while
 

 
 
 
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 1           an individual is present at such facility, except as
 
 2           provided in section 353G-     ;
 
 3      (2)  Information identifiable as part of an investigation
 
 4           into a possible violation of criminal law, except to
 
 5           the extent that disclosure is necessary to prosecute
 
 6           the violation or to continue the investigation;
 
 7      (3)  Information relating to eligibility for social services
 
 8           or welfare benefits or to the determination of benefit
 
 9           levels;
 
10      (4)  Information in an agency's personnel file, or
 
11           applications, nominations, recommendations, or
 
12           proposals for public employment or appointment to a
 
13           governmental position, except:
 
14           (A)  Information disclosed under section 92F-12(a)(14);
 
15                and
 
16           (B)  The following information related to employment
 
17                misconduct that results in an employee's
 
18                suspension or discharge:
 
19                 (i) The name of the employee;
 
20                (ii) The nature of the employment related
 
21                     misconduct;
 
22               (iii) The agency's summary of the allegations of
 
23                     misconduct;
 
24                (iv) Findings of fact and conclusions of law; and
 

 
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 1                 (v) The disciplinary action taken by the agency;
 
 2               when the following has occurred:  the highest non-
 
 3           judicial grievance adjustment procedure timely invoked
 
 4           by the employee or the employee's representative has
 
 5           concluded; a written decision sustaining the suspension
 
 6           or discharge has been issued after this procedure; and
 
 7           thirty calendar days have elapsed following the
 
 8           issuance of the decision; provided that this
 
 9           subparagraph shall not apply to a county police
 
10           department officer except in a case which results in
 
11           the discharge of the officer;
 
12      (5)  Information relating to an individual's nongovernmental
 
13           employment history except as necessary to demonstrate
 
14           compliance with requirements for a particular
 
15           government position;
 
16      (6)  Information describing an individual's finances,
 
17           income, assets, liabilities, net worth, bank balances,
 
18           financial history or activities, or creditworthiness;
 
19      (7)  Information compiled as part of an inquiry into an
 
20           individual's fitness to be granted or to retain a
 
21           license, except:
 

 
 
 
 
 
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 1           (A) The record of any proceeding resulting in the
 
 2           discipline of a licensee and the grounds for
 
 3           discipline;
 
 4           (B) Information on the current place of employment and
 
 5           required insurance coverages of licensees; and
 
 6           (C) The record of complaints including all
 
 7           dispositions; and
 
 8      (8)  Information comprising a personal recommendation or
 
 9           evaluation."
 
10      SECTION 9.  Section 92F-19, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
 
11 amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
 
12      "(a)  No agency may disclose or authorize disclosure of
 
13 government records to any other agency unless the disclosure is:
 
14      (1)  Necessary for the performance of the requesting
 
15           agency's duties and functions and is also:
 
16           (A) Compatible with the purpose for which the
 
17           information was collected or obtained; or
 
18           (B) Consistent with the conditions or reasonable
 
19           expectations of use and disclosure under which the
 
20           information was provided; or
 
21           (C) Required under the interagency coordination
 
22           agreement pursuant to section 353G-     .
 
23      (2)  To the state archives for the purposes of historical
 
24           preservation, administrative maintenance, or
 
25           destruction;
 

 
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 1      (3)  To another agency, another state, or the federal
 
 2           government, or foreign law enforcement agency or
 
 3           authority, if the disclosure is:
 
 4           (A) For the purpose of a civil or criminal law
 
 5           enforcement activity authorized by law; and
 
 6           (B) Pursuant to:
 
 7                (i)  A written agreement or written request, or
 
 8               (ii)  A verbal request, made under exigent
 
 9                     circumstances, by an officer or employee of
 
10                     the requesting agency whose identity has been
 
11                     verified, provided that such request is
 
12                     promptly confirmed in writing;
 
13      (4)  To a criminal law enforcement agency of this State,
 
14           another state, or the federal government, or a foreign
 
15           criminal law enforcement agency or authority, if the
 
16           information is limited to an individual's name and
 
17           other identifying particulars, including present and
 
18           past places of employment;
 
19      (5)  To a foreign government pursuant to an executive
 
20           agreement, compact, treaty, or statute;
 
21      (6)  To the legislature, or a county council, or any
 
22           committee or subcommittee thereof;
 

 
 
 
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 1      (7)  Pursuant to an order of a court of competent
 
 2           jurisdiction; 
 
 3      (8)  To authorized officials of another agency, another
 
 4           state, or the federal government for the purpose of
 
 5           auditing or monitoring an agency program that receives
 
 6           federal, state, or county funding;
 
 7      (9)  To the offices of the legislative auditor, the
 
 8           legislative reference bureau, or the ombudsman of this
 
 9           State for the performance of their respective
 
10           functions;
 
11     (10)  To the department of human resources development,
 
12           county personnel agencies, or line agency personnel
 
13           offices for the performance of their respective duties
 
14           and functions, including employee recruitment and
 
15           examination, classification and compensation reviews,
 
16           the administration and auditing of personnel
 
17           transactions, the administration of training and
 
18           safety, workers' compensation, and employee benefits
 
19           and assistance programs, and for labor relations
 
20           purposes; or
 
21     (11)  Otherwise subject to disclosure under this chapter."
 

 
 
 
 
 
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 1      SECTION 10.  There is appropriated out of the general
 
 2 revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $       , or so much
 
 3 thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2000-2001, for
 
 4 substance abuse treatment programs for inmates incarcerated in
 
 5 Hawaii correctional facilities.  The sum appropriated shall be
 
 6 expended by the department of public safety for the purposes of
 
 7 this Act.
 
 8      SECTION 11.  Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed.
 
 9 New statutory material is underscored.
 
10      SECTION 12.  This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2000.