Pubdate: Thu, 01 Aug 2002 Source: Shawnee News-Star (OK) Copyright: 2002 The Shawnee News-Star Contact: http://www.onlineshawnee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/412 Author: CAROL COLE CARSON INKS LAW TO FIGHT RURAL LABS Rural areas around Shawnee could benefit from legislation introduced by U.S. Rep. Brad Carson, D-Oklahoma, to help cope with the escalating national methamphetamine epidemic. The Rural Safety and Law Enforcement Improvement Act introduced Friday by the District 2 congressman would provide grants to law enforcement agencies to hire, train and retain officers and to acquire technology and equipment. "(Dealing with meth labs is) too important to eastern Oklahoma as well as many other rural areas," said Karen Campbell, Carson's legislative director Wednesday. The bill would expand the Methamphetamine Hot Spots Program to include personnel and equipment for enforcement, prosecution and environmental cleanup. It would provide additional training and equipment for the Community Oriented Policing Services or COPS Program. It would set aside 10 percent of the grant funding for tribal law enforcement. "The situation is only getting worse," Carson said in a recently released statement. "Every sheriff I have spoken with since taking office has told me the overwhelming majority of everyone in his or her jail are there for a drug-related crime." He said responding to a meth lab call increases the dangers of law enforcement jobs exponentially. "Oftentimes the labs are booby-trapped with bombs, grenades or other traps. The labs are filled with toxic gas, and are highly unstable and explosive. In Oklahoma and across rural America, law enforcement often lacks the necessary and federally required protective equipment to bust a meth lab," Carson said. And add those problems to the toxic waste from meth production leeching into the ground water, causing environmental problems. Carson cited numbers that five pounds of toxic waste are produced for every one pound of meth. The legislation will also assist rural communities in developing 911 services. Communities would be qualified for the program using census data. Campbell said because the legislation was introduced relatively late in the legislative year that it might not make it to the floor. Congress is in August recess, and the bill will be considered in committee in September. "Since we've introduced it late in the legislative year, our intent is to gain a lot of support," she said. "It's a slow-moving process. But you have to start somewhere. If we don't get to take it all the way, we will introduce it again." Carson sponsored the bill along with Congressman Brian Baird, D-Washington; Congressman Jim Matheson, D-Utah; and Congressman Jerry Moran, R-Kansas. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart