Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jun 2003 Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (NY) Copyright: 2003 Rochester Democrat and Chronicle Contact: http://www.democratandchronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/614 Author: Rick Armon AREA RAISES DRUG-TRAFFIC PROFILE Label Of 'High-Intensity' Would Snare Tightly Focused U.S. Funds Rochester, Albany, Buffalo and Syracuse are requesting that the U.S. government label the upstate region a "High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Area" in hopes of getting more federal attention and money to fight illegal drugs in western and central New York. "We recognize the problems that drugs are causing on the quality of life in Rochester and the other upstate cities, and we refuse to throw up our hands and quit," Rochester Police Chief Robert Duffy said Friday. "We're going to seek every resource we can to reverse the trends that we've unfortunately seen in the last decade." The U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy created the program in 1988 to boost collaboration among federal, state and local law enforcement and to target federal money to troubled areas. A total of 28 regions have received the designation, including New York City and northern New Jersey, and Philadelphia and Camden, N.J. "We're one of the very few, if not the only, program that fuses federal, state and local cooperation and integration of information," said Kurt F. Schmid, the national program director in Washington, D.C. "It's a very unique program and allows for a region to fight the drug threat." The designation would result in the creation of a local intelligence center, which would be overseen by an executive board made up of federal and local authorities. The board would help target drug enforcement and be eligible for federal money. New programs typically receive $1 million to $3 million in startup funds. The four cities are working on their application to join the program. "It's not something that I would want to put on the cover of a Chamber of Commerce promotional flier, but it is a fact of life that we have to face," Duffy said about the designation. Rochester Mayor William A. Johnson Jr. said the four upstate cities agreed at his urging to seek the designation jointly to strengthen the application. Rochester, Albany, Buffalo and Syracuse are connected by the New York Thruway -- a popular and accessible route for shipping drugs. "Despite all of our best efforts, we're having marginal success in stamping out drug traffic," Johnson said. The four communities face similar problems, and "our intelligence has indicated that we are often being victimized by the same groups and individuals," Duffy added. He also noted that Buffalo is a major international border crossing, and Rochester will become one next year when a high-speed ferry begins running across Lake Ontario to Toronto. In Monroe County, 1,092 adults were arrested on felony drug crimes in 2001, the latest statistics available from the state Division of Criminal Justice Services. That's down from more than 1,500 in 1998. But Duffy said felony drug arrests tell only part of the story. Drugs fuel the city's homicide rate -- 45 homicides were recorded last year -- and such other crimes as assault, prostitution and vehicle thefts, he said. He said research has shown that Rochester's illegal drug trade is a $35 million to $40 million annual business. Not every city or county that applies automatically receives the federal designation. Schmid said about 50 percent of applications are turned away. Communities must meet stringent criteria. For example, the drug trafficking there must have a harmful impact on other areas of the country. The Office of National Drug Control Policy also may not consider a region for a new program but instead expand a neighboring one to include a new area, Schmid said. The upstate cities are working on the application with a Maryland consulting firm, Carnevale Associates LLC, which is run by a former director in the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Johnson said the cost -- $50,000 -- would be shared among the four cities. Officials did not know when the application would be submitted. The review process is intense, Schmid said, and can last more than six months. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart