Pubdate: Tue, 02 Apr 2002 Source: Herald, The (WA) Copyright: 2002 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/190 Author: Janice Podsada Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) THE WAR ON METH, DOOR TO DOOR Granite Falls Students Take To The Streets To Educate Residents About The Dangers Of Drugs. GRANITE FALLS -- Tyler Anderson was determined to knock on every door. The 17-year-old Granite Falls teen-ager had a message to deliver to local residents. It began with the sentence, "There's a real problem with methamphetamine here." It ended with the words, "We're trying to do something about it today." More than 150 teen-agers from across the state and Granite Falls met at the Pilchuck Valley Chapel Monday morning to distribute 2,000 skinny yellow folders crammed with information about methamphetamine. By the end of the day, they had spread out across town and talked face-to-face with local residents, young and old. The daylong event was sponsored by the Granite Falls Community Coalition, a citizens group that formed in November to fight the town's growing methamphetamine problem. The coalition's members include local teachers, counselors, firefighters and Jim Romack, pastor at Father's House Church in Granite Falls. Romack coordinated Monday's event. He met with teens in the church sanctuary before sending them out on the streets. But first he introduced the group to two teen-agers whose lives had been damaged by drug use. A 15-year-old girl, who only gave her first name, told the group she began using methamphetamine two years ago. "My name is Rita and I started using when I was 13. I've been in two inpatient lockdown facilities in the last six months," she said. Some teen-agers were shocked by her admission, but not all. Neither Tyler nor his friend Matt Ferguson, 15, flinched when they heard her story. Why should they be shocked? After all, Tyler and Matt attend Granite Falls High School, where scores of teens struggle with addiction, Tyler said. "I've heard kids at school talk about how they're cooking (making meth) at home," Tyler said. It takes 30 to 40 minutes to cook meth, said Tony Mace, who accompanied a group of six teen-agers as they walked door-to-door. Mace, a Snohomish County firefighter, lives in Granite Falls. "You can get all the ingredients you need at the drugstore or the hardware store," he said. In Granite Falls, nearly 6 percent of 10th-graders admit to having used methamphetamine -- more than twice the state average. By eighth grade, a quarter of the town's students say they use tobacco products, 25 percent say they have smoked marijuana, and 10 percent have used inhalants -- airplane glue or aerosols -- to get high. In each instance, the percentage is almost twice the state average. Drug use begins early and remains above average through high school, according to a state Substance Abuse Survey conducted in 2000. "That's where were at, guys," Romack told teens. "Let's go do something about it." When asked why methamphetamine use is so prevalent in Granite Falls, Tyler's response was twofold: Kids are bored and meth is easy to get. "Kids don't feel like there is anything to do around here except party," Tyler. "They go to parties, and that's what's at the party." Margee Lopez, a Granite Falls resident, thanked Tulla Landis, 17, for the information packet. "There are a lot of kids in this area," said Lopez, whose house sits next to 75th Street NE, a narrow, two-lane county road. "The cars in this area fly. I worry the kids involved are high on drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom