Pubdate: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 Source: Sioux City Journal (IA) Copyright: 2004 Sioux City Journal Contact: http://www.siouxcityjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/945 Author: Michele Linck, Journal staff writer CONGRESS CUTS TRAINING CENTER FUNDS BY 90 PERCENT The 13,000-page omnibus appropriations bill passed by Congress last month contained funding for the Sioux City Police Department's Regional Training Center. But it was only $250,000 -- $2.25 million short of what's needed. Meanwhile, the Midwest Counterdrug Training Center, started two years ago at the Iowa National Guard's Camp Dodge near Des Moines, received $3.5 million in an August Department of Defense appropriations bill. If more money isn't found for Sioux City, the Training Center won't be able to operate much beyond next Sept 30, the end of the federal budget year. Police Chief Joe Frisbie said it could stay in business until Jan. 1, 2006, but, with only $250,000, it would probably shrink to a one-man facility by year's end and would accomplish much less training. Since it was created seven years ago with $1 million snagged by then-5th District U.S. Rep. Tom Latham, the center has trained 17,000 law enforcement officers from 35 states in drug interdiction techniques such as tactical communications, deadly force situations and vehicle searches. It will begin a new program, training for officer-drug dog teams, in March. Frisbie said the federal government has identified money from illegal drugs as a primary source of terrorist funding, and drugs are known to drive nearly all other crimes in communities. "Terror and crime: put those two together and have the federal government walk away? It makes you wonder what they're thinking," he said. Frisbie will meet with someone from the office of U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, next Wednesday to discuss the center funding problem. He is also working to get a group of Iowa law enforcement leaders to go to Washington next month to lobby for support of drug interdiction and training programs. The timing is critical since the center's best hope for full funding this budget year is the supplemental appropriations bill that will come before Congress in February. In addition, the chief said he will be asking the leaders of police departments that have used the center to lean on their own congressional delegations to support its funding. Show me the money It's not clear what happened to the $2.5 million budget request, which had shrunk 90 percent when it emerged from the conference committee. At first everyone thought it was a typo, Sgt. Mike Hamm, a trainer and program coordinator at the Training Center, said. The cut was apparently made in conference committee, where senators and representatives work out the differences between bills before sending them back to each house for a vote. The office of 5th District Congressman King said he initiated the $2.5 million appropriation twice, both times through letters to the subcommittee chairman. In a statement relayed by his office, King said, "I've identified an appropriations strategy and I'm working across the rotunda to reach a solution for the Training Center." Hamm said U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley's office told the department the federal government never cuts a program 90 percent, that it would end it instead. A spokesman for Grassley, R-Iowa, said the money was not in the bill when it went to conference, but that the senator would work with Sioux City "in any way possible" to get the funding next year. He said it was harder to get "earmarks" such as the Training Center funded in the 2005 budget. A spokesman for U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, said the funding was an earmark on the House side but didn't appear in the bill that was sent to the conference committee. "That, coupled with the Bush reduction in (anti) crime funding, made it more difficult to get," he said. Frisbie said in his conversations, congressional offices have blamed "glitches," but can't or won't be more specific. "More than anything else, I'd like to get some answers about where the money went," he said. He said it seems all the money is being funneled into homeland security. "We haven't figured out how to get it out of there," he said. Drug dogs hike request The center has received annual funding of $2.2 million in recent years. The extra $300,000 in this year's request is to cover increasing costs and to pay for training the new officer-dog teams. Frisbie said the center was approached by Congressman King's office to add that training, but it was based on money already in hand. The city used a federal grant to buy 10 fully trained dogs, which will be received in March. They'll train with their officer, then be distributed to 10 cities in this region. The Sioux City Regional Training Center was initially designed to train officers within 150 miles. But, because it pays for the training and because it soon became so highly regarded, departments from even the largest cities -- New York, Chicago, Dallas -- began sending officers here five years ago. While the officers' own departments pay their salaries while they're in Sioux City, the Training Center pays the cost of their training, gives them meal money and pays for their hotel. The center regularly uses five hotels near its location at the Sioux City airport, pumping money into the community. The Sioux City Regional Training Center is the only civilian-run counterdrug training center in the country. There are six others, all at National Guard bases, including the center at Camp Dodge, near Des Moines. Frisbie said he tried to get that center based at the 185th Iowa Air National Guard Refueling Wing in Sioux City so the two could cooperate and complement each other. That didn't happen, likely for political reasons. None of the other centers are so close together as Sioux City and Des Moines. While the Sioux City center trains only law enforcement officers and their departments' employees, the Camp Dodge facility is beginning to provide drug education for community groups and agencies, according to Lt. Col. Tim Glynn, commandant of the Counterdrug Training Center. He said that funding for Sioux City's training center and his comes from different budgets. "I think we both have a good role to play," Glynn said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin