Pubdate: Thu, 15 Nov 2001 Source: Chattanooga Times & Free Press (TN) Copyright: 2001 Chattanooga Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.timesfreepress.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/992 Author: Andy Sher, Washington Bureau Note: Staff Writer Judy Walton contributed to this report. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) POLICE, METH FORCE GET FUNDS WASHINGTON -- A major congressional spending bill passed Wednesday by the House will provide Chattanooga police with $1.5 million to upgrade technology, and another $1 million to help the Southeast Tennessee Methamphetamine Task Force, said Rep. Zach Wamp, R-Tenn. The measure also contains $1 million for a high-tech business incubator in Hamilton County to aid New Economy businesses. "The Commerce, Justice, State and Judiciary (spending) bill is very, very favorable to our region," said Rep. Wamp, who sits on the House Appropriations Committee, the panel that shapes spending bills. He said spending on the local projects was agreed to in a conference committee in which House and Senate members ironed out differences in the comprehensive spending measure. Other provisions include $3 million for the Law Enforcement Innovation Center at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. The LEIC provides training and technical assistance, information technology and research to aid local law enforcement agencies. The bill also contains $1 million for UT's National Forensics Science Institute. Rep. Wamp credited Tennessee Republican Sens. Fred Thompson and Bill Frist for their efforts on the UT funding. An additional $300,000 in the bill is for the Chattanooga Endeavors Program, a comprehensive rehabilitation program that provides employment training and job placement services for former criminal offenders in the Hamilton County area. U.S. Attorney Harry S. "Sandy" Mattice praised Rep. Wamp's success in obtaining the Methamphetamine Task Force money. It is the task force's third year of funding, Rep. Wamp said. Mr. Mattice said much of the money is earmarked to provide overtime pay and equipment for task force officers. But the money also will be spent to clean up hazardous chemicals used to create the highly addictive drug. "The manufacture of methamphetamine involves extraordinarily toxic and sometimes deadly chemicals," Mr. Mattice said. Lou Wilson, an intelligence and operations officer with the Chattanooga-based task force, said the "average cleanup of a moderate or small size lab is $2,000 to $5,000." He said hazardous materials teams are called out to clean up the labs, which have proliferated in East Tennessee. The task force operates in some 18 counties. Rep. Wamp said the technology grant for Chattanooga police will provide the department with the tools to "do their jobs more efficiently and effectively.. Officers will be able to reduce response time, stay in touch with other officers and instantly check criminal databases." Chattanooga Police spokesman Ed Buice said the technology grant should "really move us out of the Stone Age into the Information Age." He said a "big chunk" of the money will go toward purchasing computers for individual officers' cars. Some of the money could be used for software upgrades and other items, Mr. Buice said. Meanwhile, Rep. Wamp said obtaining the $1 million in economic developing was a "real positive development that I didn't have high expectations for. That's real good news." Hamilton County Executive Claude Ramsey said the city and county are rethinking a previous plan to build a stand-alone incubator for high-tech businesses. "This gives us the opportunity to do something on a different level, maybe through Chattanooga State or UTC and with the Oak Ridge fiber-optic project," Mr. Ramsey said. He said Rep. Wamp "does a good job about picking up on what we're trying to do in the community from an economic development standpoint." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake