Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jan 2001 Source: Modesto Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 2001 The Modesto Bee Contact: http://www.modbee.com/help/letters.html Website: http://www.modbee.com/ Author: Russell Clemings, The Fresno Bee LAWMAKERS PLEDGE ACTION ON METH PROBLEM It will take a few weeks for details to become clear, but lawmakers who took part in the Central Valley Methamphetamine Summit are pledging to introduce legislation to address some of the concerns raised by the participants. Law enforcement officials and others at the summit, held Tuesday in Fresno, asked for more federal agents, more equipment, and tighter laws and regulations to help address the region's meth problem, especially the hundreds of industrial-sized meth manufacturing labs that are scattered throughout rural California. The summit was organized by the state's two senators, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, and Ceres Rep. Gary Condit and Hanford Rep. Cal Dooley, all Democrats, partly in response to an investigative report published Oct. 8 in The McClatchy Co.'s California newspapers, including The Modesto Bee. With the 107th Congress still getting itself organized and a new president awaiting inauguration, staff members said it likely will be several weeks before specific plans can be made to deal with issues raised at the summit. One piece of legislation that already is being prepared would address an issue that got little attention at the summit -- the difficulty that many meth users have in getting drug treatment if they do not have health insurance. At the summit, Boxer's staff distributed a pledge to introduce a bill that would help ensure treatment on demand for chronic users of meth and other drugs. Saying that the number of substance abusers who are not in treatment exceeds the number who are, Boxer proposed boosting federal funding for state, local and nonprofit drug treatment programs by an unspecified amount. She said the bill for unmet treatment needs in California alone is $330 million. A Boxer staff member said the bill is likely to be introduced within a week or two of the inauguration. In addition, Boxer and Dooley said at the summit that they plan to convene a second summit dealing with treatment and other issues, such as prevention and education, related to reducing the demand for drugs. Another summit participant, Rep. Douglas Ose, R-Sacramento, will propose adding several counties to the federally-designated High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area in the Central Valley, a spokesman said. That task force combines federal, state and local enforcement personnel in a coordinated attack on the meth trade. Ose spokesman Yier Shi said the congressman wants to extend the existing high-intensity trafficking area, which stretches from Sacramento to Bakersfield, to encompass the northern Sacramento Valley as well. - --- MAP posted-by: GD