Pubdate: Thu, 12 Feb 2004 Source: Free Press, The (MN) Copyright: 2004 The Free Press Contact: http://www.mankatofreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2566 Author: Nicole Christiansen, Free Press Staff Writer Note: Other elements of this series may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/source/Free+Press,+The+(MN) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CLEANUPS COSTLY, TIME CONSUMING The Madness Of Meth - Part 5 of 5 Finding a methamphetamine lab often requires months of detailed police work, but cleaning it up requires fast action and a lot of physical labor. The officers take samples of all unknown liquids and find their pH levels so they know what they're working with. Then they record what and how much of each meth-related substance they've found. "Essentially all the chemicals are caustic or flammable," said Ben Rittmiller, commander of the Minnesota River Valley Drug Task Force. Moving or even touching a jar containing the flammable meth mix can be dangerous, but officers are trained to know what to look for and what areas to avoid. Identifying a meth lab is pretty easy - glass jars, bottles, tubes - but Waseca County Sheriff Tim Dann said authorities usually don't find a lot of meth in its final stage. "With meth, if you have it, you use it," he said. "Meth users use it fairly quickly because they want to keep that high." Scouring all surfaces After the evidence has been collected, law enforcement agencies call in cleanup crews from businesses such as Bay West Inc., a St. Paul-based company that specializes in environmental, industrial and emergency cleaning services for industry and government. Depending on the length and degree of contamination of a house, crews sometimes go in wearing protective masks, suits, gloves and boot covers, said Dan Hannan, emergency response manager at Bay West. Crews wear all the protective gear when their health could be at risk. Effects for people with acute exposure to meth chemicals include shortness of breath, cough, chest pain, dizziness and chemical irritation. Less severe exposures can result in headache, nausea, dizziness and fatigue. After crew members are safely inside, they do a "top-to-bottom cleaning of the home," Hannan said, "basically just scrubbing the heck out of the walls and floors" with an industrial-grade detergent. The crew cleans the home from the inside out. They make note of spills and stains and wipe all surfaces looking for traces of meth. "It permeates all the carpeting and all the Sheetrock on the walls and goes through the heating system," Le Sueur County investigator Keith Frederick said. Then crews clean or remove furniture and curtains if necessary, Hannan said. Many times walls are repainted to seal in remaining meth residue throughout the house, no matter where the meth was being made. "Even if they've been cooking in the basement, there can be pretty high levels upstairs and vice versa," he said. Sinks and pipes that chemicals were dumped in sometimes need to be replaced, too. Bay West crews swab the areas after they're done cleaning to make sure the meth is gone. Outside the home, land that meth-making solutions have been dumped on is excavated, taken off the property and disposed of, Hannan said. The Drug Enforcement Administration takes the chemicals away and incinerates them, he said. Passing the buck This process isn't cheap. Bay West usually charges $2,000 to $3,000 to clean a meth-infested apartment and up to $10,000 to clean a large house. Hannan said property owners pay for the cleanup in most cases. If property owners can't pay, counties foot the bill, Deborah Durkin of the Department of Health said. Dann said he hasn't received any bills for the SWAT team's services, but he has to pay his officers overtime for their extra hours spent planning the search and collecting evidence. Once they act on a warrant, the search and evidence-collecting usually takes 10 to 12 hours, he said. Hannan said many cities and counties are trying to enact ordinances to protect themselves against property owners who can't pay for the meth lab cleanups. They're proposing that if cities or counties have to take action on behalf of the property owners, they should be reimbursed. Sibley County already has adopted such an ordinance, and several other area counties have ordinances in progress. "Rural counties cannot afford the cleanup at the rate things are going now," Le Sueur County Sheriff Dave Gliszinski said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom