Pubdate: Sun, 23 Nov 2003 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Section: Crime & Courts Copyright: 2003 The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://DesMoinesRegister.com/help/letter.html Website: http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Author: Colleen Krantz, Register Staff Writer Note: Part of a series on methamphetamine - see http://www.mapinc.org/source/Des+Moines+Register FINANCIAL TAB IS INCALCULABLE; HUMAN TOLL IS TRAGIC It's impossible to tally methamphetamine's cost to society. Lab cleanup, crime, work absences, injuries, domestic abuse and child neglect associated with the drug consume millions of dollars. "When you pay your tax bill, you just can't imagine the entire amount of money - if you could add it all up - going to the jails and prisons, going to the mental health facilities, going to the hospitals" because of meth, said state Rep. Clel Baudler, a Republican from Greenfield, who has proposed legislation dealing with a meth ingredient, pseudoephedrine. The burn unit at University Hospitals in Iowa City treated 37 people from 2000 to 2002 for injuries related to meth, many from meth lab fires or explosions. "We started calling around the Midwest and then calling burn centers around the country - there are about 100," said Dr. Patrick Kealey, medical director of the burn center. "No one else had seen anything like that." The 33 people treated so far this year and last for meth-related burns had bills totaling $2.2 million. More than $470,000 of that was passed to a collection agency and will probably go unpaid. "It's a large burden to the hospital and then, in turn, the state," Kealey said. Meth also is an environmental threat. Meth makers dump leftover chemicals in fields and streams; blasts and fires are risks; and contaminants linger in hotel rooms or houses where the drug was cooked. "I've told farmers who have had labs in their old farmhouses that they are renting that the best thing to do is throw a fuse in and stand upwind," said Baudler, a retired state trooper. "Burn it, because I would fear renting it to anyone else." Parents addicted to meth are focused on their drug, not on their children's needs. The state is left to pick up the pieces in cases of neglect or abandonment. At the extreme, death is the result. Since spring, Iowa has seen these examples: * Jaley Akers, a 6-month-old Burlington baby, suffocated in March after slipping off her sleeping father's chest. Randy Akers awoke on a couch to feel what he thought was a plastic doll pinned beneath his arm. It was his daughter. Akers, now in prison for child endangerment, had been using meth. * That same month, a Des Moines 1-year-old, Brooklyn Petithory, suffered fatal brain injuries after her father, who said he was coming down from a meth high, left her in a bathtub child-restraint seat with the faucet running. David Petithory, sentenced to 27 years in prison, fell asleep outside the bathroom as water covered the girl's face. * A South Dakota woman was sentenced to 10 years in prison last month for neglect and drug charges after her 3-year-old son was found running naked through traffic at an Interstate Highway 80 rest area at Bettendorf in June. Michelle Childers was in her car, trying to light a marijuana joint, which she told police she needed to come down from a meth high. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake