Pubdate: Thu, 07 Feb 2002 Source: Modesto Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 2002 The Modesto Bee Contact: http://www.modbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/271 Author: Michael Doyle and Jim Miller Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign) VALLEY ANTI-METH EFFORTS GET A LIFT FROM DEA, TV SPOTS The nation's top drug fighter promised Wednesday to restore personnel to the Central Valley's anti-methamphetamine campaign. In a brief Capitol Hill meeting with Rep. Cal Dooley, D-Hanford, Drug Enforcement Administration chief Asa Hutchinson pledged to add four agents to the valley's meth task force. Hutchinson, a former congressional colleague of Dooley's, said the agents would be added within a month. They will help fill in for FBI agents who have been pulled off the valley's High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program to focus on anti-terrorism efforts. "We've really made great strides in our fight against meth thanks to federal involvement, and it's important that we not lose that momentum after Sept. 11," Dooley said in a statement. In another meth-related development Wednesday, Gov. Davis and valley law enforcement officials announced in Sacramento the start of television commercials to encourage residents to tell authorities about suspected methamphetamine labs. "This campaign will educate the citizens of the Central Valley as to the dangers of methamphetamine and how they can provide information that can help law enforcement to successfully stamp out this threat to public safety and threat to the Central Valley's principal industry, which is agriculture," Davis said. Dooley's meeting with Hutchinson stemmed from a letter signed by the congressman, other House members from the Central Valley, and Democratic Sens. Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein. It was sent in early January, after it became public that the six agents assigned to the valley task force program had been reassigned after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. "The valley's methamphetamine labs supply much of the western United States and because of the wide extent of production, use of the drug has become far too prevalent," the letter states. In his meeting with Dooley, Hutchinson said he would reassign four Drug Enforcement Administration agents in Fresno to the task force. In turn, Dooley spokesman Adam Kovacevich said, Hutchinson indicated that four other DEA agents would be brought in to fill in for those reassigned. Kovacevich estimated that the meeting lasted less than 15 minutes. The Central Valley High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area links state, federal and local officers in a nine-county region stretching from Sacramento to Kern. There are 28 such programs nationwide. The Bush administration budget proposal released this week calls for a 10 percent reduction in HIDTA funding. This apparently will not affect the valley organization's existing $2.5 million budget, but it could undermine efforts to get more money. California's anti-meth commercial began airing Wednesday on cable channels in Stanislaus, San Joaquin, Sacramento and several other counties. The ad, the first to target meth specifically, shows a photo of a child as flames lick at the edges. A voice warns of the dangers of the drug. The commercial is being run in English and Spanish. "The chemicals used in making meth are highly toxic and highly explosive, chemicals that can dissolve plastic or burn human lungs," the ad says. It continues: "If you know of anyone involved in making meth, call 1-866-METHLAB." The 2001-02 state budget includes $30 million for anti-meth equipment and personnel in the Central Valley, and Davis' 2002-03 spending proposal calls for $15 million more. The first run of anti-meth commercials will cost $250,000, officials said, with some TV stations donating time for the ads. They initially will not run in Merced and a few other valley counties, but there are plans to run the ads in those counties eventually. "We want to see how it goes before we do a big buy (of advertisement time)," said Allen Sawyer, director of the state Office of Criminal Justice Planning. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh