Pubdate: Wed, 20 Oct 2004 Source: St. Joseph News-Press (MO) Copyright: 2004 The News-Press, St. Joseph, Missouri Contact: http://www.stjoenews-press.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1510 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH PLANS COMPETE Elections are good for more important reasons than hot rhetoric and entertaining debates. They also can produce a battle of ideas. Early last week, the Kerry-Edwards ticket unveiled its plan for combating methamphetamine. By the end of the week, Sen. Jim Talent and Rep. Roy Blunt, both Missouri Republicans, countered with a methamphetamine strategy from the other side of the political aisle. That is as it should be. Indeed, the two proposals reflect the different philosophies of the respective parties. Democrats want to restrict the sale of cold medicines with pseudoephedrine, which are used to make meth, according to the Associated Press. They also would give farmers federal money to better secure ammonia tanks, another key ingredient in the meth recipe. Republicans want to spend $47 million in the first year to better train police and prosecutors while shifting the prosecution of meth lab operators and traffickers into the federal court system, the AP reported. The Missouri lawmakers also plan to include a treatment component to their bill - as soon as they can find a program that works. Meth is a big enough problem that it will require more than one strategy to find a cure. Missouri shut down 2,600 meth labs last year, a record rate for the nation. Finding a solution for this problem will also take bipartisan support. "Methamphetamine has not been a partisan thing and should not be a partisan thing," Mr. Talent told the AP. "This is something that threatens everybody." We appreciate both parties' sudden interest in battling what is an old problem for Northwest Missouri. We also expect that both that energy and bipartisan spirit will survive the Nov. 2 general election. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek