Pubdate: Fri, 15 Feb 2002 Source: Southern Standard, The (TN) Copyright: 2002 Southern Standard & The Smithville Review Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=941 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1513 METH STILL RAMPANT, BUT OFF THE FRONT PAGE In a speech Sheriff Jackie Matheny made to the Noon Exchange Club Monday, he said hardly a day goes by where he doesn't receive a phone call pertaining to meth. Whether it's a tip about a possible lab, or a concerned parent worried sick about their child, the sheriff said meth is tearing at the fabric of families and this community. We should all remember how powerful a grip this drug can have, and how widespread its use has become. Just because meth doesn't dominate headlines the way it once did doesn't mean it's not a problem. Just because finding a meth lab is no longer an obscure discovery, doesn't mean our meth troubles have dissolved. The fact is, the meth problem in Warren County is as bad as ever. It could be argued the problem has reached epidemic proportions. Truth is, the drug has almost become commonplace. Meth lab busts seem an everyday occurrence. There's even one in today's edition on page 5-A. That meth bust, just like ones before it, shows how the drug has permeated our community. It's not just the drug of choice for people who are from the so-called "other side of the tracks." It's not a drug only used by the poor, or people with a long criminal history. Meth has proven to be a drug which can be picked up, used, and abused by anybody from any walk of life. It can be said meth addiction does not discriminate. The meth lab bust in Westwood, one of the nicer neighborhoods in McMinnville, illustrates how anyone can fall into meth's clutches. What can be done to fight this problem, this widespread addiction? Local stores have joined in the battle by taking products used for making meth off shelves. Customers who wish to purchase these products must ask for them at the register or at the pharmacy and quantity is limited. That would go a good way toward winning the fight if such restrictions weren't primarily in Warren County. Such policies are likely unheard of in big cities like Nashville and Chattanooga which means addicts are inconvenienced - but not prevented - from buying some ingredients in bulk. Sheriff Matheny says a multi-agency task force, which utilizes federal, state and local agencies, is one thing officers are eyeing to combat meth. It will allow prosecutors to go after meth producers on the federal level, thereby handing more jail time to offenders. An easy solution is by no means on the horizon. The process will take time and the battle will be difficult to win. But identifying the problem - and realizing meth can affect anyone from any family - will go a long way toward working for a solution. Meth isn't a drug problem which has to impact other people. It's an addiction with the power to creep into any one of our homes. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart