Pubdate: Wed, 08 Aug 2001 Source: Herald, The (WA) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/190 Author: Cathy Logg SHERIFF CALLS FOR COUNTY SUMMIT ON METH CRISIS BELLEVUE -- Snohomish County is struggling with severe problems from methamphetamine abuse and the dangers associated with making it, but there remains mostly benign perceptions about the meth trade, say county law enforcement officials. "We have to create a sense of urgency in our county," Snohomish County Sheriff Rick Bart said. "We really don't have it." To draw attention to the problem, Bart said Tuesday he plans to invite law enforcement and others from across the county to be a part of a Snohomish County meth summit. Inspiration for the county summit was gained Monday and Tuesday at a statewide meth summit in Bellevue. About a dozen county representatives joined Bart in agreeing the county needs its own summit to address the burgeoning and costly meth problem, with clandestine laboratories turning up all over the county. "It's wide in scope in that people are so transient in how they produce this," Lynnwood Police Chief Steve Jensen said. "It's manufactured in cars, motels, homes. It carries on for years because of the contamination. And many of those involved with methamphetamine are also involved in many other crimes -- fraud, forgery or car thefts." Cities and counties across the nation are struggling with the meth epidemic and have to attack it from an organized and systematic approach, said James Copple, vice president and chief operating officer of the National Crime Prevention Council. Washington state is ranked second in the nation in the number of meth labs investigated last year, exceeded only by California. The focus of a county meth summit will be to explore the extent of the problem and develop a master plan to combat it, bringing people from all segments of the county with their own ideas and expertise to map out the battle strategy. Those range from real estate agents to unions, service organizations to schools. All government agencies face the same problem: tight budgets that aren't growing with the increasing demands for those dollars. Part of the meth summit's goal will be to find creative solutions to the problem, which includes cleanup costs. More than 350 people attended the state summit, the first of its kind anywhere in the United States. The state summit will be used as a model to help other states face the meth challenge, said King County Sheriff Dave Reichert, whose department hosted the summit along with U.S. Rep. Jennifer Dunn, R-Wash. More and more meth laboratories are turning up, some in rented homes or apartments, many simply dumped in parking lots, forests or on private property. The labs are so toxic they usually kill any plants in the area and can be so devastating to a house or apartment that the cost of cleaning it can be so great that the property becomes worthless, authorities said. Stamping out the meth problem won't be easy, Snohomish County Executive Bob Drewel said. "You can't do it with the resources we have now," he said. "I'm convinced of the magnitude of the problem, but there has to be public education along with enforcement." It's not just a law enforcement problem, but also a huge public health problem that affects all aspects of society, he said. Drewel pledged to seek "every penny" of grants or other sources of money that will help, he said. In addition, authorities agree, police are finding children living in homes where methamphetamine is being made. Those children are turned over to state Child Protective Services because of the dangers in their homes, and end up in foster care. In many cases, they're not reunited with their parents, which costs the public more money. Ideas that came out of the state meth summit include the possibilities of new taxes, such as a tax on chemicals used in producing meth; streamlining government grant procedures so more agencies can apply; and passing a law that would hold parents accountable for endangering their children in meth homes. Key participants in the summit will meet again in the fall and the spring to track the progress of counties in formulating their own strategies for combating meth. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D