Pubdate: Sun, 17 Mar 2002 Source: Centre Daily Times (PA) Copyright: 2002 Nittany Printing and Publishing Co., Inc. Contact: http://www.centredaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/74 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) A LOT OF TASKS AWAIT A NEW DRUG TASK FORCE What lingered most strongly after Thursday's summit meeting of Centre County leaders on heroin use was Ferguson County police Chief Ed Connor's call for a more coordinated community effort to fight the addiction -- not at Thursday's meeting, but in December 1999, when the CDT interviewed him in the wake of a wave of drug arrests and overdoses. "Law enforcement has to work closer with health-care providers and with schools," he said then, so the sense of deja vu that many people may have felt on Thursday when people spoke of the need for more cooperation and education should be forgiven. In fact, that is what is exasperating about the whole war on drugs in central Pennsylvania. It's been almost three years since the creation of the Centre County Drug Task Force, which promised, in Attorney General Mike Fisher's words, "a newly coordinated effort to stamp out drug dealing in this county." While the task force can point to some successes, particularly in arresting dealers, it still feels as if we're simply treading water. The evidence is in the admissions by local leaders that education efforts put forth so far haven't been enough, or in concerns expressed in some quarters that the intervention and treatment services available in the county aren't sufficient. It's also in the fact, which many residents might find surprising, that the county doesn't have a systematic way to accurately gauge the magnitude of the heroin problem. While drug task force officials said at a news conference on Feb. 28 that there had been five heroin overdoses in Centre County since Feb. 1, there may have been others that were unreported. Incidents such as the death of 17-year-old John F. Gingerich II in late February, which police believe was due to a heroin overdose, are left as our best indicators of the scope of the problem. So, here we are again, with a call for a community drug task force that would work in conjunction with the already existing drug enforcement task force. Centre County Commissioners Keith Bierly and Connie Lucas have offered their office as the hub of such a task force, and that seems to be the best place to begin. It should include all of the sectors that were present at the summit meeting -- law enforcement, treatment providers, public school and Penn State representatives, health care officials and county social service officials -- and citizens committed to making an impact in the drug war at the community level. Such a task force will have a busy agenda. It should: Develop more visible and more effective education programs targeted at potential youth users and their parents. Young potential users need to be shown that drugs such as heroin have devastating consequences. Parents and other adults in contact with youths need to be aware of the signs of potential abuse and shown ways to respond. Work with institutions such as Centre Community Hospital to implement a drug-overdose reporting system so that the community has better information on the scope of the problem. Better publicize the county's existing prevention and treatment resources. Dave King, supervisor at Clear Concepts Counseling Inc., a firm that provides outpatient drug-abuse treatment under contract with Centre County, guesses that more than 90 percent of county residents don't know who to call if they or someone they know has a drug problem. Raise questions about whether new treatment options are needed within the county. For example, with the increase in heroin use in Centre County, should the closest option for methadone treatment be more than 90 minutes away in Harrisburg? Assess how the county's police resources can be more effectively mobilized to fight drug trafficking. That process has already begun with a meeting of police chiefs this past Friday. Most importantly, the task force should continuing lifting the veil of denial and apathy that keeps falling over the drug-abuse issue in the county. It shouldn't take a disaster on the scale of what's currently happening in Allegheny County -- a drug overdose death every other day, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported March 14 -- to galvanize our community to action. Yet, there is a real fear that we'll set ourselves up for just such an eventuality -- followed by yet another session of hand-wringing at yet another summit. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl