Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jan 2004 Source: Albuquerque Tribune (NM) Copyright: 2004 The Albuquerque Tribune Contact: http://www.abqtrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/11 Author: Michael Brasher Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/methact.htm (Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act) Note: Mary-Dale Bolson is secretary of the New Mexico. Children, Youth and Families Department in Santa Fe. OF METH LABS AND JUSTICE FOR YOUTHS They lead to a rise in crime rates, create drug addicts, turn normal lives into nightmares and present an enormous public safety hazard. According to the Drug Enforcement Administration, methamphetamine is the fastest-growing abused drug in rural America and is the only controlled substance that can be produced by someone without chemical expertise. In 2003, the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Department uncovered 28 meth labs, resulting in 17 arrests. It's clear to me, given our experience in Bernalillo County, that this problem has reached epidemic proportions statewide. In 1999, as an Albuquerque city councilor, I introduced legislation limiting the amount of ephedrine that could be sold over the counter to a consumer. Ephedrine is the key component in the illegal manufacture of methamphetamine and can be obtained from various over-the-counter products, such as decongestants. The passage of this bill allowed vendors to sell no more than three packages of any product containing ephedrine during one transaction. Meth labs are easily set up in residences, vehicles, apartments and hotels and only require common household appliances, glassware and chemicals and over-the-counter drugs to produce this highly addictive menace. The one factor that can be controlled is the availability of the drug central to making the methamphetamine, and that is ephedrine. I have requested that Gov. Bill Richardson and the Legislature limit the sale of ephedrine statewide in the upcoming legislative session. It is critical to regulate the sale of this drug in order to control the manufacturing of the illegal substance methamphetamine. Meth labs and the consumption of drugs produced create a dangerous and serious threat to the health and safety of our communities and the environment. I urge residents to join me in this appeal. Michael Brasher is a Bernalillo County Commission member representing the East Mountain Area and is a former Albuquerque city councilor. The trouble with jailing juveniles By Mary-Dale Bolson At first, you might think the juvenile justice system reform efforts at the community and state level don't hold young people accountable for their actions. But look again, and you might change your mind. Both locally and nationally, there is growing information suggesting there are better community approaches to help troubled youth become productive citizens. And these approaches keep our communities safer by reducing the chance of further involvement in criminal activity. These approaches already have worked well in Bernalillo County, and we want to expand the efforts across New Mexico. We'll be asking the upcoming Legislature to help us do that. Initially, we want the Legislature to allow us to use more than $5 million that New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department state facilities have saved by significantly reducing our population of juvenile offenders. The facilities are designed to handle 646 juveniles, but we have managed to reduce the number recently to as few as 355. We want to use the resulting budget savings to provide support to community programs that will offer successful alternatives to standard juvenile detention. The National Center of Juvenile Justice tells us that more than half of the detained youths are age 15 or younger and that 70 percent are held for nonviolent offenses. These young people are served better in their local communities through programs that address the issues causing them to act out. Our department is working closely with local communities to develop services for youths instead of detention or incarceration. These services include shelters, home monitoring programs, counseling and community reporting centers. The strength of the system reform effort is that it requires families, schools and communities to help create a support system for young people. Family and community involvement doesn't always happen when a young person is placed in a local or state facility. In 1998, Rio Rancho Rep. Tom Swisstack, Albuquerque Rep. Rick Miera and Albuquerque Juvenile Judge Michael Martinez started a juvenile justice system reform program in Bernalillo County. A committee of juvenile court, probation, district attorney, public defender and detention center staff members worked together to set up the program. The program continues to improve decision-making about youths who really need to be held in detention and who could be served better through community programs. A report on youths in the Bernalillo County program says that only 5 percent committed new misdemeanor crimes; 17 percent returned to detention for not following probation rules; and 76 percent completed their program successfully without any new offenses. None of the youths in the program committed a new felony. The Children, Youth and Families Department and Bernalillo County are working together to help other New Mexico communities build similar detention reform programs. The programs in local communities will be developed to meet the needs of children and families in the area. System reform programs are improving the child welfare system by causing juvenile justice and child protection professionals to work as a team on family cases. Many troubled youths have experienced some form of child abuse or family violence at home. By strengthening families with assistance from a child protection and juvenile justice team, the chances for helping these young people stay out of the juvenile justice system increases greatly. Clearly, there are troubled youths who need to be in a facility to keep our communities safe. But there are many young people in the juvenile justice system that could benefit from system reform and community services. By locking up these young people when other services to hold them accountable do exist, we miss out on important opportunities and better approaches that are less costly, less punitive and ultimately far more successful. Mary-Dale Bolson is secretary of the New Mexico. Children, Youth and Families Department in Santa Fe. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek