Pubdate: Sat, 14 Jun 2003 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Author: Michael Doyle, Bee Washington Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) VALLEY METH FIGHTERS SAY FUNDING FALLS SHORT WASHINGTON -- Central Valley narcotics officers and their congressional allies are pushing for a sizable boost in federal funding. Without it, they say, the region will continue manufacturing way too much illegal methamphetamine. "We're fighting a forest fire with a garden hose," said federal drug fighter Bill Ruzzamenti, who runs anti-meth operations in the Valley. "These are cases that are international in nature, and we're handling it on a shoestring budget." The international stakes are only getting higher amid a U.S. war on terror, as Ruzzamenti noted that Middle Eastern gangs in Canada are now thought responsible for most of a precursor chemical, pseudoephedrine, used in Central Valley meth labs. The possibility that the gangs' profits could fund terrorism worries U.S. officials. Even though officials believe some meth manufacturing has shifted out of state, they say California has a lot more room for improvement. At one point, officials estimated that the state was responsible for 80 percent or more of the nation's meth production. But there also are turf and political stakes involved as federal officials strive for control of both budget and policy, and as local lawmakers seek to steer more funding back home. The latest funding requests are, in this light, the latest illustration of how once-limited programs take root and grow. The pitch for added funding, for instance, comes on top of what's already been a tenfold increase in federal spending on designated anti-drug regions since 1990. As skeptics of government programs ceaselessly point out, it is the iron law of bureaucracy for agencies to expand wherever possible. Friday, about 30 House members urged colleagues in a Capitol Hill letter to jack up anti-meth spending in the Central Valley by 60 percent. The lawmakers sought a similar increase last year and thought they'd succeeded, but they were frustrated by the competing plans of the White House drug czar's office. "We have a serious problem," said Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Tulare, "and when the Congress allocates money, we want it spent in our own back yard." Nunes helped spearhead the latest letter, which was signed by all of the San Joaquin Valley's other House members as well as representatives from other states. It's an issue crossing state lines, as 89 House members belong to what's informally called the House Meth Caucus. Even so, Ruzzamenti speculated that "there's an East Coast mentality" involved in some funding disputes, as Washington-based officials have been more focused on cocaine than on trade in meth, or speed. Based in Fresno, Ruzzamenti is director of the Central Valley High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program. With $2.5 million in federal funds this year, and about a dozen federally paid staffers, the program targets the rampant meth trade from Sacramento to Kern counties. About 114 state and local officers are participating in the nine counties that Central Valley HIDTA serves. Ruzzamenti and San Joaquin Valley lawmakers want an additional $1.5 million for the Central Valley program. That would help pay for financial analysts to track the money trail and for sheriff's deputies to help identify rogue chemical supply operations; most fundamentally, Ruzzamenti said, it would help offset local burdens. "It is really a drain on a lot of departments, in tough budget times," Ruzzamenti said of the anti-meth effort. Congress authorized the HIDTA program in 1988, and it began with five designated areas. There are now 26, and they span most of the country. On just the West Coast, for instance, there are individual HIDTA programs targeting the Northwest, Oregon, Northern California, the Central Valley, Los Angeles and the Southwest border. The proliferation has helped lock in congressional support, boosting total HIDTA spending to $226 million, and each program also claims a number of success stories. Of 273 meth "super labs" seized in 2001, for example, 199 were found in California. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom