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Beyond Welfare Reform
Nancy K. Young, Ph.D., and Sidney L. Gardner, M.P.A.
Welfare reformanother wave in a
succession of national policies sweeping across State substance abuse
agencies, or an opportunity for the substance abuse treatment field to establish
much-needed allies? Those of us concerned about services for persons affected
by substance abuse face both an opportunity and a risk in the implementation
of welfare reform.
For years we have lamented a lack of partners at the table when decisions
are made on substance abuse treatment budgets. Welfare reform presents
an unmistakable opportunity to demonstrate how much substance abuse
treatment can help other systems achieve their goals. If this opportunity is
seized, State substance abuse agencies can gain support in Congress, State
legislatures, and local governing boards for expanding treatment resources.
The risk is that substance abuse agencies will see welfare agencies as
simply "out for our money" or as a new line
item in their budget. With this mistaken outlook, substance abuse agencies
might resist new offers to collaborate, operating as though there were no
overlap between their clients and welfare recipient populations.
In the past several months, we have frequently heard from State
substance abuse agencies that the large number of treatment service referrals from
the criminal justice, primary health, welfare, and child welfare systems creates
a barrier to clients who voluntarily seek help from the public treatment system.
Let's be clear: Taxpayers who support the publicly funded substance
abuse treatment system deserve accountability for results from that system.
That means that substance abuse clients who are driving up State costs will
and should receive priority status as a means of reducing Federal, State,
and local government costs in an outcomes-based system. That is not a threat
to State substance abuse agenciesit is an opportunity to expand the base
for treatment services and recruit the partners we need to help us at budget time.
Alone, each State substance abuse agency's funding sources are
inadequate to do the job. But combined with resources from other agencies
that share the same clients, a much larger impact can be achieved.
State substance abuse agencies can try to ignore each of the waves of
national policy that come alongwelfare
reform, managed care, outcomes-based accountability, and child protective
services reformor they can view each narrowly as a marginal new funding
system. But they could instead take a longer view and ask how the
treatment-needing population affected by each of these reforms can be helped by
treatment and support. Each of these other systems can be overwhelmed by
the problems that we know best in the substance abuse treatment field. By
sharing our strengths, rather than setting up new barriers to our services, we
can establish the partnership between State substance abuse agencies and each
of the State agencies charged with implementing other reforms. We and they
all need such cooperation to succeed.
Dr. Young specializes in social policy issues affecting children of
substance abusers. Mr. Gardner has held positions in Federal, State, and local
government agencies focused on children's policy. Together, they founded
Children and Family Futures, an Irvine, California-based nonprofit agency dedicated
to improving outcomes for children and families by providing technical
assistance to government agencies, community-based organizations, and schools.
They are the authors of Implementing Welfare Reform: Solutions to the
Substance Abuse Problem (1997), published jointly by Drug Strategies
and Children and Family Futures.
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