In the November 2020 election, Oregon approved a historic ballot initiative that decriminalized small amounts of hard drugs, like meth, heroin, and crack. Under Measure 110, people caught with drugs were to be cited with a $100 fine, similar to a traffic ticket, that could be cleared by seeking treatment services, which would be expanded with millions in revenue from the state's taxation of recreational marijuana sales. Winning nearly 60 percent support, the initiative promised to treat drug use and addiction as a public-health problem, not a criminal matter - adopting the logic that incarceration does little to curb the harms of substance abuse.
The Oregon experiment was unique in America, where on any given day 350,000 people - roughly the equivalent of the population of Cleveland - are locked up on drug offenses, and drug-possession arrests occur at a clip of one every 23 seconds. And the passage of Measure 110 was met with acclaim from reformers like Kassandra Frederique, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, who celebrated the "paradigm-shifting" victory as perhaps "the biggest blow to the war on drugs to date," while predicting Oregon would "serve as a model" for the nation.
Instead, three years later, Measure 110 now stands as a cautionary tale about the failure to match bold policy reform with competent administration. Last week, the Oregon state legislature completed an about-face in the state's novel approach to hard drugs - voting to recriminalize possession as a misdemeanor, with penalties of up to six months in jail. The vote was not close: The state House approved the bill 51-7, the state Senate piled on 21-8. The legislation is now awaiting the signature of Gov. Tina Kotek (D), who has signaled a willingness to sign it.
Score one for the Drug War.
The saying goes that "failure is an orphan." But the collapse of Oregon's bold experiment in drug decriminalization has many fathers. Some dynamics were outside of the easy control of local policymakers, including a rising tide of homelessness; the Covid-19 pandemic's hollowing out center-city commercial life; and the flood of dirt-cheap fentanyl, leading to a scourge of street overdose deaths.
But the state bureaucracy also fumbled the implementation of Measure 110, attempting to delay and divert drug-treatment funding; failing to train law enforcement on steering drug users toward rehabilitation; and relying on a cumbersome call center that proved all-but feckless at moving people in out of the grip of addiction and into treatment.
As blocks of beleaguered downtown Portland got overrun by open-air drug markets and unhoused people smoking and shooting drugs without consequence, Measure 110 became an attractive scapegoat for the explosion of urban blight.
Correlation is not, in fact, causation. Research from Portland State University has shown Measure 110 had "no impact" on violent crime and produced at most a "slight uptick" in property crime. Overdose deaths have indeed increased in Oregon - but the trajectory was rising before Measure 110's passage, and Oregon's rates are "no different from similar states," the academics write.
But politics are driven by perception. And by last spring, polling had turned decisively against the experiment, with 63 percent of voters supporting a return to criminal penalties for drug possession. This year, as deep-pocketed state business leaders threatened to launch a punitive recriminalization ballot measure, Oregon's Democratic-led legislature snapped to action to put its imprint on reform.
The bill now on the governor's desk would empower police to again arrest and incarcerate repeat, low-level drug users. Under the bill, counties can choose to offer a "deflection" program for arrestees who agree to enter treatment, enabling them to avoid jail time and a criminal record. The legislation also offers more than $200 million in new funding for drug courts and treatment clinics, while maintaining the funding mechanism from Measure 110, steering marijuana tax revenue into rehabilitation.
Drug reformers are furious about the squandered opportunity to model a new approach for the country. "It is Oregon leaders that didn't work," says Frederique of the Drug Policy Alliance. "Their chronic underfunding of affordable housing, effective addiction services, and accessible health care are to blame for the heartbreaking public suffering seen in Oregon's streets." Frederique insists there "is not a shred of evidence" that Measure 110 increased homelessness, crime, or overdose rates. And she sees the recriminalization bill as "a false promise" of a fix, meant to distract from political "incompetence."
In retrospect, the key driver of Measure 110's political demise was that it entrusted implementation of a radical drug-policy experiment to rigid state agencies and police bureaus that were not invested in - or even hostile to - its success.
Cant say im shocked, this was a complete failure and proves mass drug decriminalization is near impossible to implement successfully...Portugal says hello.
Cant say im shocked, this was a complete failure and proves mass drug decriminalization is near impossible to implement successfully...
a cautionary tale about the failure to match bold policy reform with competent administration
Portugal says hello.
It's a shame they're abandoning it already. We'll truly never know if it works.Portugal says hello to you as well.
Will Marijuana also be going back to criminalization? I don't know that I agree on the harder drugs. But Marijuana should not revert its status. It needs to be legal everywhere.
It's almost like the problem is the goofballs doing the work and not the policy. also,The bungling was intentional. They wanted this to fail so they could say "see we tried!!!" And then go back to fucking people over.
They wanted this to fail so they could say "see we tried!!!" And then go back to f***ing people over.
Why would they bother going through the motions if they had no desire to see it succeed?To get people to shut the fuck up about it.
Good.
All non-medicinal drugs should be banned. Perod.
My cousin who lives out there said that what they arent telling us is that in 2020 cops were getting their asses handed to them in brawls on streets against dope fiends and being unable to find them again.By dope fiends you mean drug users, right?
It was never about ending the drug war it was all about making cops jobs easier during that tough time for law enforcement lol.
Cant say im shocked, this was a complete failure and proves mass drug decriminalization is near impossible to implement successfully...No it isn't. Did you even read the article you quoted? They dropped the ball at almost every level.
But the state bureaucracy also fumbled the implementation of Measure 110, attempting to delay and divert drug-treatment funding; failing to train law enforcement on steering drug users toward rehabilitation; and relying on a cumbersome call center that proved all-but feckless at moving people in out of the grip of addiction and into treatment.And instead of fixing those problems, they just said forget it and went back to throwing people in jail
America is going back to being tough on crime. Good.It's astonishing how stupid this take is.
Good.
All non-medicinal drugs should be banned. Perod.
I recently spent some time in Oregon and I agree with making it illegal again. The major cities are like Hamsterdam but with little to no benefits. Its even more sad juxtaposed with how beautiful the surrounding landscape is.
Going back to throwing drug addicts in prison is not the answer. This is why nothing ever gets better in this country, "we tried nothing and we're all out of ideas!"
America is going back to being tough on crime. Good.When was america not? Why else would we have the highest incarceration rate in the civilized world?
It's astonishing how stupid this take is.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/oregon-is-ready-to-restart-the-drug-war/ar-BB1juSlKWas it?
Cant say im shocked, this was a complete failure
Correlation is not, in fact, causation. Research from Portland State University has shown Measure 110 had "no impact" on violent crime and produced at most a "slight uptick" in property crime. Overdose deaths have indeed increased in Oregon - but the trajectory was rising before Measure 110's passage, and Oregon's rates are "no different from similar states," the academics write.
Yet it's how the country is trending. Unless you want to call the country stupid. This is in blue states too.Oh gee, I'm sure afraid to do tha-
Good.Duncan,
All non-medicinal drugs should be banned. Perod.
Why would they bother going through the motions if they had no desire to see it succeed?So they can say "we tried" before going back to what clearly wasn't working but making them a whole lot of fucking money.
No it isn't. Did you even read the article you quoted? They dropped the ball at almost every level.I for one am amazed that someone I've had tagged as a trumper for years would post an article and comment in a way that shows they clearly didn't read the article beyond the headline.
And instead of fixing those problems, they just said forget it and went back to throwing people in jail
By dope fiends you mean drug users, right?
So what you're saying is, violent drug users beat the shit out of cops so they decriminalized?
Thats according to cousin.oh well dang if your cousin says so then it must be pure truth
oh well dang if your cousin says so then it must be pure truth
Measure 110 now stands as a cautionary tale about the failure to match bold policy reform with competent administration.
So they can say "we tried" before going back to what clearly wasn't working but making them a whole lot of fucking money.
Because it behooves law enforcement to keep the "free labor for prisons" pipeline open.
Law enforcement doesn't want to end crime. Why would they? If they did, they'd be out of a fucking job.
It's like all the dipshit right wing politicians honking about the border. They don't want the border closed, because then they can't profit off all of that sweet undocumented labor. They'll just blame them for all of society's problems while continuing to exploit them.
Yet it's how the country is trending. Unless you want to call the country stupid. This is in blue states too.
Good.
All non-medicinal drugs should be banned. Perod.
Given how many problems that among the developed world only the US seems to have, while claiming nothing can be done, yes, I can confidently call the country stupid.For context, this user is not an american.
Good.
All non-medicinal drugs should be banned. Perod.