Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jun 2000 Source: American Press (LA) Copyright: 2000 Shearman Corporation Contact: P.O. Box 2893, Lake Charles, LA 70602 Fax: (337) 494-4070 Website: http://www.americanpress.com/ METH LABS DANGEROUS EVEN AFTER THEY'RE CLOSED All illicit-drug labs produce deadly products when they're in use. Now we've got drug labs that are deadly after they're stopped. The drug Methamphetamine can be made from cheap chemical ingredients found in most stores. Criminals often mix their "meth" recipes in toilet bowls so they can flush away the evidence if there is a raid. Ecstasy is a methamphetamine. It increases heart rate and body temperature to sometimes dangerous levels and is often used at ''raves,'' all-night dances where young people may mix the drug with alcohol, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Demand for the stuff continues to increase. Last December, the Department of Health and Human Services reported in an annual survey that for the first time since it began examining the drug ecstasy in 1996, use among 10th- and 12th-graders had increased. The demand for the drug has triggered an explosive increase in the number of meth labs that produce ecstasy. And the criminals who operate the labs move frequently to avoid raids. When they move, they simply leave the byproducts behind. The ingredients are cheap and can be easily found at the next location. What they leave behind, however, is hazardous -- toxic chemicals that are expensive to clean up. That's where an additional problem has developed. Federal funding that states use to clean up seized methamphetamine drug labs has dried up, leaving communities with dozens of locations containing toxic chemicals -- and no money to get rid of them. ''Every time a meth lab is shut down, we're left with a toxic time bomb. And the more labs that we put out of business, the more time bombs are left ticking,'' says Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne, whose state is a hotbed of abandoned and closed-down meth labs. Cleaning up meth hot spots is expensive. It can cost as much as $10,000 to dispose of the chemicals and equipment left over from each drug lab. Ironically, the more success a state has in closing down meth labs, the bigger the clean-up burden. In Idaho, an alliance of federal, state, and local law enforcement produced a 74 percent increase in the number of labs shut down last year. But more seizures means toxic materials. Other states are also hurting. In Arkansas, which led the nation last year in meth lab seizures, per capita, local agencies are scrambling to find other sources of cleanup funds. Oklahoma has asked the U.S. Justice Department to help find $500,000 to help clean up abandoned meth lab sites. So far, Louisiana isn't among the states that have been hit the hardest by the meth-lab cleanup problem. But the administration and state lawmakers need to keep up with what's happening in less fortunate states. Lack of awareness and preparation have left meth lab hot spots in trouble -- and we don't want to be caught in that position at some future date. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson