Breath
Tests for Bums: Problem Is in the Funding, Not the Policy
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
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Why do you
do a man a bigger favor by teaching him how to fish than by giving
him a fish to eat? Because the latter plan leaves him hungry tomorrow;
the former gives him a chance at self-sufficiency.
There are exceptions,
but on balance, private charities do a better long-term job of helping
the down-and-out than do government welfare programs.
There’s a reason.
Government programs strive mightily not to discriminate. Private
charities are much more discriminating. And – in this meaning of
the word – that discrimination helps.
We’re not referring
here to discrimination by race or religion. That would be anathema
to most charitable groups.
But there is
a perverse incentive in any government program to keep the program
– and its jobs – alive. That requires a steady or growing "client
base." There’s an emphasis on paperwork and standardized procedures.
Everyone who fills out the forms gets a check. Promises to change
self-destructive behaviors aren’t even extracted, let alone enforced.
Private charities
vary, but most take a longer view. Does it really help a beggar
to feed him while making no effort to help him avoid the self-destructive
behaviors that brought him to this condition? Instead, varying efforts
are made to reach the beneficiary with a message of hope and rehabilitation.
Homeless men are helped to find food and shelter, but often with
a provision that the aid continues only so long as they make bona
fide efforts to give up alcohol and drugs, to clean up and seek
work.
The problem
arises when government funds are mixed into such private endeavors.
Comes now the
American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada, objecting to a requirement
that those seeking help from the Catholic Charities of Southern
Nevada submit to a breath test for alcohol before being admitted
to the agency’s winter shelter off Las Vegas Boulevard and Foremaster
Lane.
"This
program seems to be just another senseless assault on the dignity
of poor people and also raises serious constitutional questions
and concerns," warns ACLU executive director Gary Peck – though
of course no one is proposing to breath-test "poor people"
at random.
"There
can be no credible argument that this is being done for safety,"
Mr. Peck continues. "It’s perfectly socially acceptable in
our country to have one drink. ... So if someone goes to church
and has a glass of sacramental wine, then he can’t go to a homeless
shelter," Mr. Peck fumes. "This is completely nonsensical
and irrational."
Leaving aside
the obvious questions of just how large a goblet of wine Mr. Peck
believes the average celebrant guzzles – as well as how many of
these unfortunates habitually beg dollar bills so they can leave
them in the collection plate next time they’re in church – it certainly
is legal to have a drink. It’s also perfectly legal for a private
property owner to turn away any would-be guest with alcohol on his
breath. This makes particularly good sense if the object of the
charitable endeavor in question is to help alcoholics (and others)
change their lives.
It does not
appear Catholic Charities is leaving the imbibers to their fate;
those who can't sober up in an hour are referred – even driven –
to places such as the Salvation Army shelter, which do not enforce
as strict a standard. (Though even the Salvation Army will turn
away supplicants who are obviously inebriated. "Safety and
security are always a primary concern," explains national Salvation
Army spokesgal Melissa Temme, echoing the Catholic Charities’ concern.
"If someone is exhibiting drunk behavior, they are not allowed.")
Because Catholic
Charities is operating this shelter under a $352,000 Clark County
(tax-funded) contract, it is indeed likely the discriminatory nature
of this policy would not stand a legal test. And that’s too bad,
since it harms "tough love" efforts to help these men
straighten out their lives, as well as increasing the chance of
drunken brawls inside this shelter.
But
let’s not lose track of where the problem originated – not in the
wise policy of a private charity requiring sobriety as a first step
toward long-term rehabilitation, but in the unwise acceptance and
mingling of taxpayer funds, which carry with them the same problems
that make government welfare programs less effective than private
charity, in the first place.
December
11, 2006
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2006 Vin Suprynowicz
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