Pubdate: Fri, 12 Sep 2003 Source: Maui News, The (HI) Contact: 2003 The Maui News Website: http://www.mauinews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2259 Author: Matt Sedensky, The Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Note: To read about the "ice epidemic" in Hawaii, go to http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Hawaii . STATE'S SMALL TOWNS FACE A NEW PREDATOR HANA -- The sounds of ukulele still dance off Hana's front porches. Softballs still fly across its field. Families still have luau, still shop at the same tiny general store, still cherish their Hawaiian culture. But time has not stood entirely still in this sleepy East Maui town a three-hour drive down a twisting, narrow road from the county seat at Wailuku. Doors are being locked. Sons have been arrested. Drugs have seeped in. It began decades ago -- marijuana first, then cocaine. But when methamphetamines began to transform this town of 700 people, life wasn't so simple. ''It's the first time I've seen fear'' in Hana, said Sue Cuffe-Sykos, the town drug counselor. ''People are afraid of their own relatives.'' Crystal meth, or ''ice,'' has crept into small towns like Hana across Hawaii. It's broken up families, cost jobs, ruined lives. Drugs are, per- haps, expected in places like Honolulu, where more than 370,000 people crowd into the state's urban center. But officials say they're just as common in small-town Hawaii -- places like Kaunakakai and Lanai City on the small islands of Molokai and Lanai. And places like Hana. The drive along Hana Highway -- dotted with scenic overlooks and gushing waterfalls -- is the stuff of storybooks. It is a journey taken by some 800,000 tourists a year. At the end -- after more than 600 curves and 54 one-lane bridges -- is a tiny, one-school town. It doesn't seem like the type of place where one would want to escape from reality, an idyllic town on the rolling hills beneath the slopes of Haleakala. But many do, by smoking, snorting or injecting meth. Ray Henderson, whose Ohana Makmae treatment center opened four years ago to deal with the substance-abuse problem, says the impact of the drug -- particularly the small, icelike chunks of crystal meth that are smoked like crack -- has been ''staggering.'' ''You can just look down the street and point out the different houses where you know people are using ice,'' said Sheila Agnitsch, 42, a lifelong resident. Some blame boredom for the drug's popularity in places like Hana; others credit its ''cool'' quotient. Some say it's the deep pain Hawaiian communities have harbored. For Mona Oliveira, it was the high she had searched for her entire life. It only took a couple of weeks for her to get hooked. It took just a few more for her to crash. At least a half-dozen officers showed up at her door in Hana early one morning. When it was over, both she and her 13-year-old daughter were handcuffed, and her husband faced a 20-year prison sentence. ''I just wanted to die,'' said Oliveira, 39, now clean for two years. ''I promised myself that day -- I promised God, I promised my kids that I would never go back to anything.'' There are no reliable statistics for the number of meth users in Hawaii or the number in urban as compared with rural areas. But experts say the problem is just as prevalent -- if not more so -- in small towns, especially among young people. A 2000 report by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University found no major difference between urban and rural areas in meth use by adults. But rural 12th-graders were 60 percent likelier to have used meth than their peers in small metropolitan areas. Henderson said a 2001 survey of students from 6th grade up at Hana High and Elementary School found 70 percent felt there was a substance-abuse problem in their home. More disturbing, Henderson said, was that 75 percent of those young people felt the behavior was normal. Even on Lanai, the least populous of Hawaii's main islands, police say ice is their main focus, with a number of arrests this summer. ''It's statewide -- all walks of life,'' said Keith Kamita, chief of the state's Narcotics Enforcement Division. ''We're having problems everywhere -- Waikiki hotel rooms, sheds on the Big Island.'' Ice took over Hana so dramatically that many didn't know what was happening. ''I always thought everyone was on some kind of crazy diet,'' said Agnitsch, noting the drug's dramatic weight-loss effect. In towns like Hana -- where every face is a familiar one -- admitting you have a drug problem can be particularly difficult. ''Everybody knows,'' said Uilani Phillips-Tehiva, a Hana native who works at Ohana Makamae. ''We just don't talk about it.'' When rural drug users choose -- or, more often, are forced -- to get treatment, the geography presents hurdles, particularly in an island state. ''It's the same situation as if you need medical attention,'' said state Sen. J. Kalani English, a Democrat whose district includes Lanai, Molokai, and the eastern part of Maui that includes Hana. ''We don't have facilities enough to deal with a scrape.'' Oahu and Maui are the only islands with inpatient drug treatment programs. On Maui, the facility is hours from rural points like Hana. ''It's easier to get drugs than it is to get treatment,'' said Margaret Wansor, the clinical supervisor at the Hina Mauka facility in Wailuku. Outpatient programs typically require multiple treatment sessions each week -- a commitment that can be daunting in poor, dirt-road towns with no public transportation. ''They can be lost in their own world way out in the boondocks long before anyone comes to their assistance,'' said Anita Laviola, clinical director of the Malama Recovery Center in Kahului. For years, hundreds of Hana residents turned out each August for a volleyball match in which alumni from one graduating class battle alumni from another. Not long ago, it was a three-day event that attracted up to 30 teams. This year, just six teams played for a single day. ''All those guys that are on ice today used to be on that volleyball court,'' said Agnitsch, a lifelong resident who has battled addiction herself. Crime statistics for Hana don't reflect the anguish many residents express. Total property offenses for 2002 actually were down from 1998, and things like falling trees, flash floods and cows on the loose still make up the bulk of calls to the tiny Hana police station. But police say ice is an everyday issue. ''It's the focus of everything,'' said Lt. Mollie Cameron, the commander of the Hana police precinct. ''It's at the root of many of our major crimes.'' The mood in Hana these days is reflected in a warning sign posted over a fruit stand on the town's edge that operates on the honor system. ''Due to a rash of robberies,'' it says, two hidden video cameras record all transactions. There are signs drug abuse may be reaching its limits in Hana. Police are getting more tips from fed-up residents. The shame of seeking treatment for a drug problem is slowly diminishing. Grandmothers are asking their adult children to get help. At a recent Narcotics Anonymous meeting on the prim lawn of St. Mary's Church, two newcomers joined the small group whose words meshed with the sounds of cows in the background. ''We have the best chance of probably any community to lick this problem,'' said Henderson. ''Because of the isolation, we can choose if we want to say this just won't be tolerated.'' Cuffe-Sykos, who battled her own addictions before becoming a drug counselor, recently walked up to a well-known gathering place for ice users and tucked a note in the door. ''Our children can no longer play near your house,'' she wrote. ''They do not understand why all our doors are now locked. Aunties and uncles have become hollow strangers who no longer have time to watch out for them. ''We will not allow this drug to bring violence, pain and shame into our lives.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk