Pubdate: Sun, 23 Nov 2003 Source: Tri-City Herald (WA) Copyright: 2003 Tri-City Herald Contact: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/459 Author: Kathleen Gilstrap, Herald staff writer METH TRAFFIC HERMISTON -- Welcome to Umatilla County, home to watermelons, potatoes, rodeos and methamphetamine labs. Umatilla County had 47 methamphetamine labs busted in 2002, the fifth most in the state. More chilling, perhaps, is the number of labs per capita: one for every 1,500 people in the county. Multnomah County, the state's most populous, had one lab for every 8,000 people. According to the 2000 census, Multnomah County has 660,486 residents; Umatilla County just 70,548. Through October of this year, the county is ranked second in meth labs seized, just behind Washington County. So far, 55 meth labs were busted in Umatilla County. And the county has achieved the dubious honor of having the most meth labs per capita in the state so far this year. Drug hub for points east www.tricityherald.com/tch/newsletters/ (http://www.tricityherald.com/tch/newsletters/ "For a county that size, the amount these guys see rivals any metropolitan area on the West Coast," said Lt. Ray Duman, criminal detective for the eastern region for the Oregon State Police. Methamphetamine is fast becoming the drug of choice in this rural Northeastern Oregon county, reflecting a kind of microcosm of the epidemic that's spreading across the country, police said. In Umatilla County and elsewhere, police agencies, treatment programs and child welfare agencies say they are feeling the crunch as they try to deal with the fallout. Methamphetamine is cheap and easy to make -- and it's highly addictive. Rural areas have been particularly hard hit because some of the ingredients used in the manufacture of the drug are routinely used in agriculture, such as anhydrous ammonia. Other ingredients can be found in over-the-counter medicines. The problem is not just the mostly mom-and-pop meth lab operations that have sprouted up around Umatilla County. A lot of methamphetamine from Mexico and Southern California moves through Umatilla County on the area's web of interstates and rural highways, police said. Interstates 82 and 84 intersect in the county, and Highway 395 runs from Washington south through the area to California. A plethora of rural highways criss-cross the area as well. "It's a hub of rural highways that connect to other states," said Sgt. Craig Durbin, manager of the Oregon State Police Drug Enforcement Section. From Umatilla County, methamphetamine distributors can easily travel to Washington, Idaho and points east. Duman said he's heard of methamphetamine distributed from the county being seized as far away as Chicago and Minnesota. "It's our opinion we do have a distribution center here," Duman said. "It's like the Wal-Mart Distribution Center up there." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake