Pubdate: Fri, 05 Oct 2001 Source: St. Joseph News-Press (MO) Copyright: 2001 The News-Press, St. Joseph, Missouri Contact: http://www.stjoenews-press.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1510 Author: Julie Belschner DRUG TASK FORCE IS REORGANIZING Liability insurance, director, part-time staff lost by unit RICHMOND, Mo. - The North Central Drug Task Force is scrambling to reorganize after losing its liability insurance, its director, its part-time staff and one of its counties. The good news is, in the midst of the upheaval, it's received notice of a $110,000 federal grant. The force provides support and intelligence to its member agencies and deals with disposal of drugs and chemicals. It covers Ray, Carroll, Chariton, Livingston, Howard and Saline counties. Last month, Grundy County dropped out. "The insurance was canceled," Grundy County Sheriff Greg Coon said. "When we found out we'd been operating without insurance for some time, we both resigned, myself and the Trenton, Mo., police chief. "I felt like that information had to be pried loose. After numerous questions, it was, 'Oh, yeah, you aren't covered.' I said, 'I quit.'" The task force had been paying $1,200 a year in insurance premiums to cover its members - until the insurance company abruptly withdrew its coverage, task force board chairman Doug Porter said. The next closest bid was $14,000. "I knew they were going to pull it (the insurance)," said Mr. Porter, who is the Richmond, Mo., police chief. "We were kind of on track to getting the problem solved when they did it. So we just started doing everything through the appropriate agency (sheriff or police agency). The local law enforcement did the work. We were just in there to assist them. During that time, we didn't try to do any high-risk things like undercover work or buying drugs." The task force operated without insurance for about three weeks, members said. The solution, Mr. Porter said, was to drop the force's five part-time staff members, who had no other insurance coverage. Then the four full-time staff members were returned to the respective departments they had come from. Those officers still work within the task force, but under the individual departments' insurance umbrellas. The various police and sheriffs' departments are then reimbursed by the task force for any expenses incurred. On the heels of the discovery that the force was operating without insurance, director Robyn Spangler resigned. "I think the insurance snafu was a factor, but certainly not the only factor," Mr. Porter said. "I think she was getting tired of fighting it, trying to balance the grants, all the paperwork as well as all the cases. This is our second director. This is a position that burns them out after a few years." Ms. Spangler had been with the force for two years. She could not be reached for comment. The board is now looking for a new director. "I believe we can better utilize the task force with the right person running it," Livingston County Sheriff Steve Cox said. "I'm asking we find someone more highly motivated." The $110,000 grant will come from a plan U.S. Sen. Jean Carnahan, D- Mo., pushed through the Senate. Her plan will distribute $1.1 million to the Missouri Drug Eradication Initiative. No date has yet been released for the funds' arrival. The money is to be used to hire two additional task force officers along with equipment. "I think with not using the part-time people we're going to have to rethink some things," Mr. Porter said. "We're hoping to rework our budget to hire one more full-timer now. We've got a lot of area to cover. How that wall will shake down we'll have to wait and see. We'll have to see what the new director would like to do." And what about Grundy County and Trenton? "We'd certainly welcome them back," Mr. Porter said. "We haven't heard a peep," Mr. Coon said. "I hate it, because the task force did good work for us in the past. Possibly we may find some money for someone of our own. We're off the beaten track up here. It was an hour and a half for them to get here. So we're looking into other avenues. We need people who can concentrate on our drug problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens