Pubdate: Sat, 26 Jan 2002 Source: Lincoln Journal Star (NE) Copyright: 2002 Lincoln Journal Star Contact: http://www.journalstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/561 Author: Joanne Young METH PROBLEM 'SIGNIFICANT' While Lincoln Police Chief Tom Casady and Lancaster County Sheriff Terry Wagner had the attention of three governing boards, they wanted to drive home a point: Methamphetamine use should be a major concern for the residents of Lincoln and Lancaster County. Violent crime, including several recent homicides, have been intertwined with meth use, the two told members of the County Board, City Council and Lincoln Board of Education at a joint meeting Friday morning. The rapid increase in thefts from automobiles, with a loss of more than $2 million last year, is linked with the drug. Forgeries - up 33 percent - and frauds - - up 21 percent - are linked. The cost of dismantling a meth lab is a huge drain on personnel and money - an average $3,000 each time police officers, sheriff's deputies, firefighters, Nebraska State Patrol troopers, health workers and others put on protective suits and begin the hours-long process. Twenty-eight people worked for nine hours at one lab that caught fire in a home. One man has died in a meth lab explosion, and several fires have caused serious property damage. Thursday night, Lincoln police arrested a man who had 1.23 pounds of meth - along with a loaded gun - in his car when it was stopped for a traffic violation at 25th and O streets. The 21-year-old had enough of the drug for about 1,800 doses. And so, the two law enforcement leaders are on a mission to raise awareness of methamphetamine use and the crimes and dangers it spawns in the city and county. In 27 years fighting crime, Casady said, he has never seen a drug cause such tribulation. "We see this as a really important significant community issue sliding by under the searchlights," Casady said. "We're not trying to alarm people unnecessarily . . . but we'd like it to get a little public attention." Another critical issue is the environmental hazards to neighborhoods and to children who live in homes where meth is manufactured - hazards from toxic chemicals include battery acid, acetone and anhydrous ammonia. Children are also endangered by addicted parents or other care givers who get so consumed by the drug they neglect nutrition, personal appearance, jobs, bill paying and getting their kids to school. Casady said it is easy for people to dissociate themselves from news stories on meth until they have a personal experience with use by a neighbor, co-worker or friend's son or daughter. But he doesn't see any evidence that the problem has peaked locally or shown any sign of slowing. "I think we're hanging on by our fingernails, to tell the truth," Casady said. "This is not a problem that's going away, but I don't think people are in tune with it." Lincoln Board of Education President Doug Evans asked what officials are doing to solve the problem. Replied Casady: "Primarily, we're involved in trying to arrest the hell out of people." Twenty-three officers and three deputies - including 13 SWAT team members - are trained to deal with meth labs. But more people need to be trained. "As a practical matter, we do not want to burn people out. We've got some personnel who we are overusing," he said. "We need a few more on rotation, particularly supervisors." Lincoln also needs more treatment options for users of the highly addictive drug. And money to continue drug court when the current grant runs out. Ultimately, something needs to be done "upstream" to keep meth from coming into the community, Casady said. "We don't have all the answers, but I can tell you it's a darn significant problem," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom