Pubdate: Mon, 04 Mar 2002 Source: Dodge City Daily Globe (KS) Copyright: 2002 The Dodge City Daily Globe Contact: http://www.dodgeglobe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1473 Author: Rep. Jerry Moran, R-Kansas Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METHAMPHETAMINE BRINGS WAR ON DRUGS INTO KANSAS Kansas is fighting a war against methamphetamine. The battleground can range from a rural Ford County farm to a house next to a Wichita elementary school. Over the last eight years, the production, distribution and use of meth has become a threat like no other to our way of life in rural America. Kansas consistently ranks in the top 10 in the nation in the number of meth labs seized. Despite our efforts to increase funding and staff to fight the growing meth trade, production and trafficking of the drug continue to increase. New tactics need to be employed, and new battle plans need to be drawn. In order to engage the help of the federal government, I recently brought to Kansas the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Asa Hutchinson. In a meeting with law enforcement personnel from across the state at the Law Enforcement Training Center in Yoder, Administrator Hutchinson and I heard firsthand the difficulties facing police chiefs, sheriffs, district attorneys and others as they battle meth in their communities. Their plight is one of shortage -- a shortage of funding, a shortage of staff and a shortage of options to stop the continued climb in the growing number of meth labs. As Salina Police Chief Jim Hill put it, "We are overwhelmed." Despite our best efforts, given the resources that exist, we are barely keeping up. No one agency is in charge of fighting meth, nor is it a law enforcement fight alone. Due to the destructive nature of the drug and the effects on its users, law enforcement and community leaders must work together in fighting production and addiction. We need to have greater cooperation between federal, state, and local agencies in meth investigations and seizures. As a member of the Methamphetamine Caucus in the U.S. House, I will continue working to bring the attention of Congress to the struggles facing Kansas. Also, with the help of Administrator Hutchinson, I will work to re-emphasize the necessity of federal funds in the fight against drugs here at home. The war against meth cannot be won on resources alone. More needs to be done to improve treatment programs and facilities in the state. Kansas lacks the facilities and funds to adequately treat meth addicts. The state needs to develop more in-patient treatment facilities to treat meth addiction. In addition, better programs need to be developed in our communities to educate people -- both young and old -- about the dangers of the drug. Prevention starts at the community level, and everyone should step forward to aid in this process. The fight against methamphetamine is far from over. But everyone must come together to protect our way of life from the terrible consequences of this drug. We must all do our part to keep drugs away from our homes and out of our communities. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake