Santa Cruz Public Hysteria Citizens Task Farce Meets Again!

NOTES BY NORSE:  Looks like the Public Hysteria Citizens Task Farce (Mayor Bryant’s hand-plucked gang of preprogrammed worthies which calls itself the Public Safety Citizen’s Task Force) is running into a few obvious cold hard facts in spite of itself.    (See article below)

As they say about even a busted clock being right twice a day, even the Task Farce and police fluffpoodle Shanna McCord has to stumble over the obvious now and then as the Take-Back-Santa-Cruz inspired group marches dutifully towards its prefabricated “run the homeless out of town” conclusions.

Naturally the Lane/Posner “liberals” have no organized principled response–as they’ve bought into the mythology of a “public safety” “menace” that doesn’t exist (any more than it did 10-20 years ago).

I made the following comments (in somewhat modified from) in the Topix section that follows the article and encourage others to do the same.  The comments begin at http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/localnews/ci_23638487/santa-cruz-police-at-loss-how-get-handle  :

Now it becomes clear–as it always was–that the absurd, abusive, and counterproductive shut down of the Barson St. Needle Exchange was a primary Bigotry Blunder–as was obvious from Day One.

Returning to old Drug War rhetoric is a nice election eve trick (inveigh against prostitutes, bums, immigrants, …Chinese and Jews too, while you’re at it). But it’s futile ignorance and prejudice.

The politically-motivated agenda went over in the atmosphere of Fear cultivated by Take Back Santa Cruz and its opportunistic allies in the Downtown Association, SCPD, and Santa Cruz Neighbors.

The ridiculous claim that Santa Cruz is “overrun with needles” by bringing 1000 needles to City Council, and then shutting down the City’s only Needle Exchange center that has taken in 250,000 needles last year defies the straight face test. Obviously there’ll be an escalating health crisis according to trustworthy authorities who claim expansive needle exchange as the Best Practice, whatever scaremonger rhetoric the venomous Drug Warriors spew.

Requiring more documentation and regulation—whether at Needle Exchange or the Homeless (Lack of) Services Center will produce more environmental abuse, theft, and general disrespect for the law as well as heightening polarization, resentment, and ultimately violence.

Even poor people will only take so much before they strike back in self-defense.

Attacking poor people’s right to use public spaces and their survival sleeping behavior and labeling these “crimes” is major dumb Attacking addicts as criminals is equally stupid. But it appeals to the fear and phony “do something!” impulse and plays into the hands of those seeking political power.

Not to mention the financial costs of trying to jail people caught in the vise of the ongoing Depression.

Dumb. Dumb. Dumb.

Santa Cruz police at a loss on how to get a handle on drug and alcohol problems

By Shanna McCord  Santa Cruz Sentinel  Posted:   07/10/2013 09:26:21 PM PDT

SANTA CRUZ — A top Santa Cruz police official painted a dire picture of the problems drug and alcohol addiction cause the city, which are exacerbated by a court system that all but ignores the issues, he said.

 

Deputy Police Chief Rick Martinez delivered his report on the impacts of addiction as part of a panel discussion Wednesday to the Santa Cruz Public Safety Citizen Task Force.

The 15-member task force, created earlier this year by the City Council in response to increased crime and complaints from residents, is charged with finding solutions to some of Santa Cruz’s crimes and behavioral problems.

The panel included a 21-year-old heroin addict; Lynn Harrison, drug and alcohol program manager for the county Health Services Agency; and Rod Libbey of the treatment program Janus. Libbey is also a task force member.

Martinez said Santa Cruz is saturated with more alcohol permits per capita than any other city in the state, resulting in a chronic problem especially concentrated downtown with panhandling, public urination and public intoxication.

He said such behavior greatly impacts the quality of life for Santa Cruz residents and business owners, but there is not much police can do beyond making repeated arrests to stop the crimes because offenders face little repercussion after the arrest.

Unless a violent crime is committed, the court only considers municipal code violations a civil issue and turns the ticket over to collections, Martinez said.

“It was a financial decision by the courts to make more money and lighten their work load,” Martinez said.

“It’s disheartening to see the justice department turn its back on our city to make their lives a little easier.”

Only after an offender has failed to appear in court three times in six months can police get an arrest warrant, he said. Some low-level offenders in Santa Cruz have 60 to 80 violations under their belt, he said.

Of 3,600 citations issued to local homeless people in 2012, only 96 were taken care of, Martinez said.
“It’s a huge frustration point for us,” said.

One of the speakers said he grew up on the Westside and started smoking pot at age 9, moving into heavy drugs by 18.

He said he now has an $80-a-day heroin habit, and stealing from stores or burglarizing cars are common ways he feeds the addiction.

He told the group there isn’t much that can help a heroin addict outside of being locked down in a rehabilitation facility.

Most heroin users don’t choose to help themselves kick the powerful habit, he said.

He suggested task force members look into easier and cheaper methadone access, free food for people living on the streets and a new needle exchange program close to downtown.

“There are no clean needles anywhere,” he said. “Needle exchange has to come back or AIDS and hep C will be everywhere.”

Task force members asked questions of the panel and took notes as they begin the next phase of their mission in creating a report with recommended solutions to the city council in November.

Chairman Kris Reyes said the group’s work only becomes more difficult in the next few months.

“We’re going to be having conversations that are uncomfortable and challenging,” Reyes said. “We want to deliver a report that is thoughtful and realistic in addressing the totality of the issues we’re facing.”