Pubdate: Tue, 19 Feb 2002 Source: Hutchinson News, The (KS) Copyright: 2002 The Hutchinson News Contact: http://www.hutchnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1551 Author: Bill Wison DEA CZAR HEARS PLEAS FOR HELP Salina Police Chief Says Drug Problem Getting Unmanageable The police chief of Salina, a city overrun by methamphetamine, publicly pleaded for federal help Monday. But President Bush's drug enforcement czar told Police Chief Jim Hill during a Hutchinson town hall meeting to be thankful for the federal help Hill and other Kansas law enforcement officials have. Asa Hutchinson, administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, received a loud and clear message Monday from the Kansas police at the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center. The state's battle against methamphetamine is being lost, Hutchinson was told. But none voiced that frustration more eloquently than Hill. "Naively, I used to think four or five years ago that the battle against drugs could be won with resources," said Hill, head of Salina's police force the last 11 years. "Today, I'm just hoping to break even. But instead, the problem is growing larger." Hutchinson said he came to Kansas to meld two forces in the battle against methamphetamine - law enforcement and treatment centers. "It's important, I think, to merge those two services and make sure we're on the same page," he said. "We have to work both those sides of this issue to make sure we can achieve the greatest amount of success. But it's plain from what I heard here today that there's going to be a funding issue with the level of federal support." Salina, the largest American city at the convergence of two interstates, is emblematic of the state's struggle against methamphetamine. It wages a losing battle on the backs of its taxpayers without federal aid, Hill said. "We're so overrun with taking down the meth labs that there's nothing we can do about the Mexican meth that's being imported," he said. "We have hundreds of reports from our drug intelligence that we cannot expand upon unless we get direct corroboration." The methamphetamine problem has mushroomed in Kansas in the past eight years, from four labs in 1994 to 846 last year - 450 that were operational, said Larry Welch, director of the Bureau of Investigation. Fifty-five of those were in Reno County. And with state money drying up, Welch admitted he was thankful for federal aid. "In 1995, 14 percent of my budget was federal grants and fees," Welch told Hutchinson. "Today, it's 40 percent. We're no longer state-supported. We're state-assisted. Your presence here today tells us somebody believes us and we're not exaggerating the methamphetamine problem in Kansas." But in difficult federal budget times, it's going to be tough to "turn the corner" in Kansas, Hutchinson said. "I think the infrastructure is in place to do that," he said. "We have better laws to deal with the precursor drugs. We have better education programs in place. "But we have two serious problems to address: the methamphetamine coming from Mexico and channeled through places like California. "We're making progress turning down a positive road. But long-term consistency, from you and the federal government, is going to be the critical element." There was no argument from Reno County officials, who voiced some disappointment with Hutchinson's message. "I've got a prosecutor (Tom Stanton) who was up all night three nights last week doing drug warrants," District Attorney Keith Schroeder said. "Yet, it appears our money's going to be cut. I sure didn't hear any cavalry bugles blowing out here today." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart