For Immediate Release: October 28, 2008
Contact: Margaret Dooley-Sammuli at (213) 291-4190 or Tommy McDonald at (510) 229-5215
Yes on 5 TV Spot Focuses on Treatment Success, Fiscal Savings
Supporters Say Prop. 5 Means More of Both
SACRAMENTO â With the budget deficit worsening and prison overcrowding reaching crisis levels, voters are looking for an affordable and effective alternative. Proposition 5 builds on Californiaâs proven treatment-instead-of-incarceration programs for nonviolent drug offenders. According to the nonpartisan legislative analyst, Prop. 5 will expand access to proven treatment programs and cut state costs.
The savings â in lives and taxpayer dollars â of Californiaâs existing treatment programs is the theme of âSuccess Storyâ, a new TV spot released today by the Yes on 5 campaign and now airing statewide. The ad focuses on Proposition 36, the treatment-instead-of-incarceration program approved by voters in 2000, which has graduated 84,000 nonviolent drug offenders and cut state spending on incarceration by $2 billion.
The ad comes just days after the release of a new study on Proposition 36.
Al Senella, president of the California Association of Alcohol and Drug Program Executives, said âThe proof is in the research: treatment works and it cuts costs. But Prop. 36 hasnât been adequately funded. That means some people arenât getting all the help they need and taxpayers arenât seeing all the savings they should. Inadequate investment in treatment means higher costs later.â
Conducted by independent researchers at UCLA, the October 14 report found that Prop. 36 consistently serves 35,000 nonviolent drug offenders each year, saves $2 for every $1 spent, and that program completers have lower recidivism rates.
Tom Renfree, executive director of the County Alcohol and Drug Program Administrators Association of California, said âUCLA showed that the program needs individualized treatment, increased supervision and improved accountability. Prop. 5 delivers on all these recommendations. For those not satisfied with Prop. 36, Prop. 5 is the answer. It will improve outcomes and further cut costs.â
Margaret Dooley-Sammuli, deputy campaign manager of Yes on 5, said, âProp. 36 has been a huge success. What all the research tells us is that treatment can be even more successful at cutting recidivism and prison spending. Thatâs why Prop. 5 is on the ballot.â
The nonpartisan Legislative Analystâs Office found that Prop. 5 will lower incarceration costs by $1 billion each year and reduce prison-construction costs by $2.5 billion. This doesnât include savings related to reduced crime, fewer social services costs (e.g. emergency room visits, welfare), and increased individual productivity.
For the ad: http://www.prop5yes.com/campaign-ads-videos
For the report:http://www.uclaisap.org/prop36/documents/2008%20Final%20Report.pdf
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