Pubdate: Fri, 03 Mar 2000 Source: Portland Press Herald (ME) Copyright: 2000 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.portland.com/ Forum: http://www.portland.com/cgi-bin/COMMUNITY/netforum/community/a/1 Author: David Hench AGENCY URGES MORE STATE FUNDING FOR WAR ON DRUGS In 1991, the state contributed $1.7 million to its drug-fighting task force, which at the time deployed 58 agents in the war on illegal drugs. Now, the Maine Drug Enforcement Agency can only afford 36 agents and is seeking an emergency appropriation of $536,000 to avoid further cutbacks. "We can't carry out our mission to identify and arrest drug dealers without it,'" said Roy McKinney, director of the state agency since 1997. The Legislature's Appropriations Committee holds a work session today on the Public Safety Department's budget proposal, which includes the request for fighting the drug trade. The number of drug dealers arrested statewide has hovered between 700 and 900 a year for the past eight years, according to state statistics. But police say drug problems have worsened: Hard drugs like heroin are creeping for the first time into rural parts of central and northern Maine, and drug use by youths has jumped, they say. The MDEA, the state's intergovernmental drug task force, was created 12 years ago to better fight drug trafficking. Officers are drawn from local departments to work with the task force. The agency assists local departments in making drug arrests and by training the local officers on loan to the agency. The effort has been successful, say supporters. Year after year, MDEA agents make more than half the arrests in the state for drug trafficking. "The only way you're going to be effective in doing drug investigations is through multi-jurisdictional task forces,'' said South Portland Police Chief Edward Googins. "The same players are doing the same thing in multiple locations. You cannot do justice to that type of operation in your own little world, your own little community.'' When the war on drugs was a high-profile public issue, the agency was well-funded. But since 1991, its state funding has steadily dropped from $1.7 million to less than $400,000 a year from 1996 to 1998. Some of the reason, McKinney suspects, is that the public felt the war on drugs should have an end. "Drug trafficking and combating it was a big topic,'' he said. "Now, the issue has lost focus with society in general. "Unless you have a drug dealer living across the street, the average citizen may not see that impact,'' he said. But communities will see the impact in increased drug-related crimes, court and prison costs and youth drug use, he said. Sen. William O'Gara, D-Westbrook, a member of the Criminal Justice Committee, said the agency's work needs to continue and that means having state support. "They need the money to continue tracking down not just the people buying and selling on the street, but those who are providing it to them, the bigger fish,'' he said. The decline in funding has left the agency's seven offices across the state understaffed, he said. The Augusta office C2AD with a supervisor and two officers C2AD covers Kennebec, Waldo, Knox, Lincoln and Sagadahoc counties, he said. The Portland office covering Cumberland County has six officers but could use 10, he said. The shortages mean less contact between local departments C2AD which often are the first to discover drug activity C2AD and the agents dedicated to investigating drug crimes. The agency has had to disband specialized investigative units: one focused on collecting intelligence about drug activity, another pursued drug dealers' assets and a third targeted pharmaceutical drugs. The Legislature increased funding to $787,000 this year, but has budgeted the state share to drop to $261,000 next year. In recent years, the agency has also collected about $80,000 in proceeds from property seized from drug dealers. Most of the agency's funding comes from a $1.3 million federal grant, part of a Justice Department program to encourage similar task forces across the country. McKinney says if the state does not increase its share, it runs the risk of losing some of its federal money, which requires $600,000 in state matching funds. Even if the Justice Department money continues, the agency would not have enough money to pay for operational expenses like unmarked cruisers and laboratory analysis of drugs, he said. The federal MDEA money covers the salary and benefits of 24 officers. The remaining 12 are donated to the drug-fighting effort by local departments like Portland, South Portland and Westbrook. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson