Pubdate: Fri, 01 Aug 2003 Source: Tennessean, The (TN) Copyright: 2003 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: Bill Poovey, AP Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CUMBERLAND SHERIFF TO BUILD CENTER FOR CHILDREN OF METH USERS CHATTANOOGA - Misery and suffering that methamphetamine causes for children have the Cumberland County sheriff working to open a safe house, with toys, beds and volunteers on call. ''Right now the only place we've got to deal with kids is here in the jail,'' Sheriff Butch Burgess of Crossville said. Burgess, himself a foster parent, said children are being exposed to the poison vapors from cooking the illegal drug in his county along the Cumberland Plateau. The Tennessee Department of Children's Services last year removed almost 500 children from the custody of parents who were using or making meth. Burgess said he has grant money and a building for his planned child advocacy center. He said retirees have volunteered to stay with children who are removed from meth-making parents. Doctors also have volunteered to provide medical services, he said. ''We've been trying to tell everybody east of us what is coming,'' Burgess said. In McMinn County, Sheriff Steve Frisbie is having a shower building constructed to wash off people who are considered contaminated from exposure to cooking hazardous chemicals such as brake cleaner. Frisbie said the shower building also is for his officers who might be exposed to the poisonous chemicals. ''This seems to be the popular drug right now,'' he said. While the long-term health effects from such exposure or from using the highly addictive stimulant drug are not known, researchers say children commonly suffer respiratory problems, tremors, difficulty with coordination, an intolerance to human touch and a susceptibility to learning disabilities. In addition to the hazardous materials and threat of explosion from making the drug, meth users are prone to hallucinate and become aggressive, in some cases violent. Their children often are neglected or abused. Federal records in Chattanooga, Knoxville, Nashville and Memphis reflect what agents describe as a growing popularity and an apparent eastward migration of the drug. ''It has spread to the plateau and then to the east,'' said Joey Reece, resident agent in charge at the Drug Enforcement Agency office in Knoxville. ''We got it from both ends, from the Sequatchie Valley and the Cumberland Plateau.'' DEA records for southeastern Tennessee show 464 clandestine labs busted so far in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, compared to 334 in all of fiscal 2002. Reece said the count is 165 labs elsewhere in East Tennessee so far in fiscal 2003, which he described as an increase from last year. Reece said meth is ''destroying a lot of families.'' He said that among illegal drugs, meth ''is outpacing everything else in growth by leaps and bounds.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin