Vox: North Carolina is the latest state to find welfare recipients rarely use illegal drugs

Vox: North Carolina is the latest state to find welfare recipients rarely use illegal drugs [.3%] by Victoria M. Massie:

The law, which requires North Carolinians who receive public aid to be screened and possibly tested for drugs, went into effect last August. Applicants are automatically referred for drug testing if they have been convicted of a felony within three years of applying to the program.

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services told Vox that they screened 7,600 applicants to the Work First Program between August 3 and December 31, 2015. Among them, 150 were referred for drug testing and 21 tested positive — that’s “0.3 percent of the approximate 7,600 applicants and recipients screened for drug abuse,” the DHHS confirmed to Vox via email on Tuesday (though that number is not necessarily reflective of the total aid population).

State lawmakers assumed welfare recipients inherently engage in criminal activity, and therefore use public assistance to pay for drugs. The results suggest these ideas have little (if any) statistical grounds, and that there is no reason to isolate welfare recipients in particular.

. . .

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, at least 13 states drug test welfare recipients and another 19 states have proposed similar legislation.

They “assumed,” I submit, because drug testing welfare recipients is racially motivated. It is no longer beyond dispute.

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