Pubdate: Thu, 11 Sep 2003 Source: Mountain Times, The (NC) Copyright: 2003 The Mountain Times. Contact: http://www.mountaintimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1699 Note: Does not accept LTEs via email or feedback form. All LTEs must be mailed. Author: Kathleen McFadden Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DRAWING A LINE IN THE SAND Anti-Meth Community Meeting Draws a Crowd In his introductory remarks, Boone Area Chamber of Commerce Chair Joedy Eller set the tone of the meeting within the first seconds: "We're not going to tolerate meth in Watauga County," Eller said at Tuesday's Chamber-sponsored anti-methamphetamine community forum. "This afternoon we're going to draw a line in the sand and say no to drugs." Eller urged the gathering of elected officials, government administrators, civic and nonprofit leaders, business representatives and interested citizens to draw that line by disseminating information, raising awareness of the many facets - social and environmental - of the methamphetamine problem and enlisting community support in saying no to the drug that has been dubbed "Watauga County Public Enemy No. 1." Sheriff Mark Shook, who since taking office has made meth lab interdiction a priority, spoke directly to the wider social implications arising from the personal devastation of methamphetamine addiction: "This is a problem that can take the county and state to its knees," Shook said. "It has taken communities like ours and destroyed them. "This drug is so addictive that people will give up what they've worked their entire lives for," Shook continued, and he told a story, one he has told in other venues, of a mother in Kentucky who voluntarily relinquished her child to social services case workers rather than report for addiction counseling. "She would rather do the meth," Shook said, and "she chose the drug over her child. "This is not a law enforcement problem," Shook told the group, "it is a community problem and we must work together." Shook introduced North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper who continued the social threat theme by talking about the potential health, abuse and neglect dangers to children living in homes where methamphetamine is produced; the risks to law enforcement personnel and first responders who can be injured by explosions and toxic fumes; and the dangers to the environment when poisonous byproducts are dumped onto the ground, poured into creeks or abandoned by the side of the road. Cooper told of children in other states who had been diagnosed with meth-related neurological damage and infected with hepatitis C from being pricked by unclean needles left lying within a toddler's reach. Cooper pointed to the statewide increase in meth labs since 1999 when just six labs were busted across North Carolina, compared to the 118 that have been taken out so far in 2003. Of those 118 labs, 24 of them have been in Watauga County, 20 percent of the state total. What Cooper didn't say is that the state has been slow to respond to the growing problem, failing to supply guidelines, standards and help other than law-enforcement assistance from the State Bureau of Investigation. However, a number of local front-line personnel have filled that vacuum by forming the multiagency Watauga County Methamphetamine Task Force. Established earlier this year, the group meets monthly to discuss the spectrum of meth-related issues and develop county solutions to problems that the state has so far all but ignored. The task force has developed procedures and protocols for emergency management and personnel decontamination, for protecting children and taking them into custody and for training in-home workers. The task force has been hampered, however, by the absence of state standards for measuring toxicity in a home where meth has been produced and for determining when the surroundings are safe enough for children to return. Some answers could come from a state summit - scheduled for October 2 in Winston-Salem - that Cooper announced, but he said the purpose of the statewide meeting was to develop a package of "tough laws" for detection, intervention and punishment; he did not address the lack of toxicity standards and follow-up family issues related to the drug. Following Cooper's remarks, three SBI speakers addressed the group, including Robin Pendergraft, SBI director, who discussed the steady increase in the problem since the 1980s, the bureau's response, the SBI's increased focus on training and the expansion of its training programs to local law enforcement, rescue and firefighting personnel. Pendergraft told the group that the SBI is also working to secure grant money to institute a Drug-Endangered Children's Program, modeled after a program that began in California, to coordinate the efforts of social workers, law enforcement agencies, prosecutors and doctors to help children exposed to drugs and drug-related crimes. Such funds would be a boon to the local meth task force that is struggling financially to replace children's clothes, toys and other belongings when children are removed from a home. Members of the task force decided early in their protocol development efforts that the best way to safeguard children who had been exposed to the methamphetamine production process was to leave all potentially contaminated items behind. Next on the program were SBI agent Van Shaw and forensic chemist Ann Hamlin who handled the educational and awareness portions of the program. They discussed the common, household products and the apparatus used to synthesize methamphetamine from over-the-counter cold medications, the toxic byproducts created during the "cooking" process, the medical and environmental dangers posed by those byproducts and the 5 to 7 pounds of toxic waste left behind for every pound of methamphetamine produced. The two agents also discussed methamphetamine addiction, characteristic behaviors and the low treatment success rate - less than 5 percent. SBI agents and local law enforcement personnel expect the meth problem to continue to grow, but Sheriff Shook said that business owners can help his office by reporting quantity purchases of precursor chemicals and community members can help by raising awareness and spreading the word about the dangers of methamphetamine. Statistics indicate, Shook said, that every meth cook teaches five others how to synthesize the drug. One of Tuesday's meeting participants suggested that everyone there adopt the same strategy - passing on the information they gained at the meeting to five people who weren't able to attend and helping, as Shook requested, "to get the word out." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake