Pubdate: Fri, 24 Aug 2001
Source: Desert Sun (CA)
Copyright: 2001 The Desert Sun
Contact:  http://www.thedesertsun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112
Author: Jake Henshaw

LAWMAKERS STRUGGLE TO FUND DRUG WAR

SACRAMENTO  There's a tug-of-war in the Capitol between legislators from 
the Central Valley and Southern California over funds to combat 
methamphetamine.

In the recently approved state budget, there is $30 million to find and 
shut down laboratories producing the illegal drug in the Central Valley.

"By all accounts, the Central Valley has seen a dramatic rise in the 
methamphetamine production and distribution, especially in the form of 
super-sized dangerous clandestine laboratories," Sen. Charles Poochigian, 
R-Fresno, wrote recently in defending the need for the new funding.

His letter was addressed to Assemblyman Carl Washington, D-Paramount, who 
is trying to siphon off $10 million from the Central Valley funds for an 
existing program in seven counties, including Riverside County, to help 
children endangered by methamphetamine.

"We can't have a war on methamphetamine without a war to rescue innocent 
children placed in harm's way by criminally negligent parents," Washington 
said.

Caught in the middle:The conflict has particularly upset Central Valley 
lawmakers like Poochigian and Assemblywoman Sarah Reyes, D- Fresno, because 
they both have supported the children's program, but insist it needs to 
find another source of money.

At this point, the odds seem to favor the Central Valley because the 
governor is the one who proposed boosting the anti-methamphetamine campaign 
there from $1.5 million to $30 million.

But legislators are wary of the delegation from the Los Angeles Basin, by 
far the largest in the Capitol.

Office of Criminal Justice Planning officials said the Los Angeles region 
is the beneficiary of a host of state and federal law enforcement 
activities to combat illegal drugs, from $10.5 million in federal money 
specifically for anti-meth work to helicopters, federal agents, and other 
resources.

Methamphetaminecan cause a range of health problems from hallucinations to 
heart trouble and tissue deterioration. The chemical is produced by 
small-time criminals and by major drug dealers in farmhouses, suburban 
homes, warehouse and other hidden locations throughout the state.

Cracking down: In the Coachella and Imperial valleys, arrests have run the 
gamut from busts at small, rural labs to large-scale operations such as one 
shut down in Mecca in May. In that bust, Riverside County Sheriff's 
deputies arrested four peopleand seized a suspected methamphetamine lab 
capable of producing $500,000 worth of the drug.

Also in May, border agents at the Calexico Port of Entry arrested a 
16-year-old Mexicali girl after they seized 35 pounds -- or $322,000 worth 
- -- of methamphetamine.

At the heart of the legislative conflict is the struggle to ramp up law 
enforcement efforts to keep up with the meth producers.

Statewide in 1999, investigators discovered more than 2,000 meth labs, 
nearly double the number found five years earlier, according to the state 
Office of Criminal Justice Planning. California produced 80 percent of the 
nation's supply.

As evidence of the drug's demand, OCJP said more than a third of all state 
prison parolees tested positive for meth use, more than any other illegal drug.

"The popularity of methamphetamine in the prison population underscores the 
growing popularity of the drug in the general population," the OCJP said in 
a report.

By far, the largest number of labs were found in the Los Angeles region, 
979 in 2000 compared to 193 in the Central Valley. This Los Angeles edge 
includes the so-called super labs, which produce 20 pounds or more of meth.

The actual total volume produced by all labs in the two regions is unclear.

To Washington and the Los Angeles district attorney's office, which is 
lobbying hard for the lawmaker's measure, Assembly Bill 41, this justifies 
tapping the $30 million pot for their program, which is losing federal support.

" AB 41 gives us an opportunity to conduct a complete war on 
methamphetamines" by meeting the needs of children living in houses where 
the drug is produced, Washington said.
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