Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jan 2004 Source: Herald-Citizen (TN) Copyright: 2004 Herald-Citizen, a division of Cleveland Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.herald-citizen.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1501 Author: Jill Thomas Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BURKS VOWS NOT TO GIVE UP IN FIGHT FOR TOUGH ANTI-METH LAWS What's stopping the Tennessee legislature from coming down hard on the production and sale of methamphetamine as the epidemic of abuse grows across the state? According to State Sen. Charlotte Burks of Monterey, three things account for the lawmakers' lack of response: * Legislators who know about the drug epidemic but represent areas that are still untouched by it and aren't concerned that it's eventually going to impact them as well and won't support bills punishing drug producers; * Retail lobbyists who are persuading legislators to put very little muscle behind deterrents; * The lack of money to set up effective punishments for those who manufacture and sell drugs. But Sen. Burks hasn't given up the fight. First steps Burks has been working for sometime to address the growing drug problem in Middle Tennessee. She was instrumental in creating legislation to see that the exposure of children to methamphetamine would be dealt with as child abuse. Children now are removed from families where meth is produced. But much of the time Burks and others seem to be fighting a losing battle. Last year she sponsored a bill that would have required retailers like Walgreens and Wal-Mart that sell pharmaceuticals and household products that may be used in the making of meth to put some restrictions on the sale of those items. But retailers association lobbyist Russell Palk met with the House Judiciary Committee and convinced the members that such a law would hurt the retailers, said Burks. The bill never made it out of the House sub-committee. "Locally we get such good cooperation from retailers," Burks told the Herald-Citizen. "But at the state level, they don't want to get involved... "Lobbyists are too strong in Nashville. They have too much input on how laws are passed. They're not all bad, of course. Sometimes they can give you a different view or educate you. "They can serve a good purpose but sometimes they don't seem to serve the best interests of the people," said the Monterey senator. Towns with answers When her proposal died in committee, she was delighted to see some of the towns in Middle Tennessee take matters into their own hands. "I wanted the ordinances to pass in Putnam County," she said. Led by Cookeville, all four Putnam County towns, including Algood, Baxter and Monterey, passed community ordinances that require retailers to keep records on the sales of meth materials as well as asking retailers to train employees to keep a close watch on the purchasers of items containing meth materials. Retailers in all communities have expressed support for the ordinance. This month the Drug Investigation Division of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation in partnership with the Governor's Office, the Tennessee Police Chiefs Association, the Tennessee Retailers Association and the Tennessee Sheriffs Association launched a statewide education program based on Burks's efforts last year and as a result of the success of the area ordinances. "They (the legislators) are beginning to understand what a problem this is in the state, but I was hoping for a stronger bill," Burks said. While Gov. Bredesen called the statewide program a "critical first step in addressing the drug problem," the program does less to track possible meth producers than the town ordinances enacted in Putnam County. "It's similar to the Putnam County ordinances but the state's Meth Watch is more for education than enforcement. It's acting more as an alert to the community," said Sen. Burks's executive assistant, Pam Ash. Money problems The state is having difficulty in getting past education to actual enforcement. Providing tough penalties for drug production costs money for incarceration that the state doesn't have. "Every time we increase the penalty for drug production, there's a fiscal response," Burks said. Costs for the clean-up of hazardous materials in meth labs, which can run into the tens of thousands, is currently picked up by the federal government. "Right now the federal government is paying for everything. But sooner or later those bills are going to come to the states and we won't know what to do," Burks said. She pointed out that there is a price tag the state is already paying. With costs of nearly $7,200 per child to remove 562 children from meth homes and place them in foster care, last year the bill to Tennessee was over $4 million. But if the money can't be raised for stricter penalties, Tennessee is going to continue to see meth producers move into rural Tennessee from the adjacent states, driven here by legislators there who have found the money to create mandatory sentencing for drug manufacturers. "We probably could have passed legislation to stiffen the drug penalties, too, but we have no funds. Somehow we have to find the money," Burks said. Burks has a petition bearing more than 6,000 names from Middle Tennesseans asking the legislature to assign mandatory minimums to those arrested for meth production or use. "I'll take the petition to the governor. It will show him that people are concerned here," she said. But Burks didn't see how the legislature could initiate mandatory sentencing without more money in state coffers for incarceration costs. Instead she is relying on the continued actions and help of the TBI and area law enforcement groups and even churches to keep the spread of meth production down in the Upper Cumberland. "Sheriff Butch Burgess in Cumberland County has been working with the churches to have their congregations take meth kids on a temporary basis. Sheriff Burgess is a real model -- as are Cookeville Chief Bob Terry and Putnam County Sheriff David Andrews," she said. Burks is depending on actions that will educate Tennesseans to help put a stop to the continued spread of drug use. "If we can just educate the young people -- I can't say enough about Bill Gibson (District Attorney General) and the DA's office," Burks said. The DA's office has recently been given a sizeable grant that has paid for an additional assistant district attorney who devotes his time exclusively to meth cases and to the production of a CD that will educate citizens on the dangers of methamphetamine. "The community has been wonderful," Burks said. "The CD will be the best thing to educate our children. They say it only takes one time of using meth and you're doomed. You can't play around with it. We almost have to mark the adults off unless they can receive a Christian based rehabilitation. I guess we need the power from above to get help on this," Burks said. "I don't want the message to be watered down. Kids need to see the reality of this drug. It won't hurt them to be scared," she said. Future legislation For the future, Sen. Burks sees other legislators beginning to get tough. "Charles Curtiss (state representative from White County) has been drafting a law to address the fact that the owners of motel rooms and meth lab homes will have to make restitution for the clean up." And Burks has begun to work with the TBI on a bill with some teeth in it. "We hope to get something meaningful this year. We just have to keep trying." She recounted a memory from her late husband Tommy's tenure as state senator about 25 years ago. He became concerned over the marijuana use in Middle Tennessee and wanted to make the sale of drug paraphernalia illegal. "It took him nine years to get that law," she said. "He failed eight times before the legislators caught up with the need. He always said you have to be tenacious and patient. So that's what I've learned to be." For those who want to join in Charlotte Burks's fight to get stronger deterrents to meth use and manufacture, she recommends several actions. * Ask your local retail store managers to tell their corporate headquarters that they want to actively combat meth production; * Volunteer to help take care of kids who have been removed from meth homes or join one of the anti-drug coalitions that are forming; * Call the Judiciary Committee (which decides which bills will reach the floors of the Senate and House) and ask for action on the meth problem. The number of the House Judiciary is 1-615 741-1351; the number for the Senate Judiciary is 1-615 741-7821. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin