Pubdate: Tue, 2 Mar 2004 Source: Duluth News-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2004 Duluth News-Tribune Contact: http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthtribune/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/553 Author: Chris Hamilton, News Tribune Staff Writer Series: link http://www.mapinc.org/source/Duluth Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BILL BATTLES GROWING PROBLEM Prevention: A Bill in the Minnesota Legislature Aims at Curbing the Meth Problem, and Its Proponents Say They're Just Getting Started. By the time hay fever attacks Minnesotans this summer, those with allergies may need to ask a store clerk to reach behind the counter to buy a box of Sudafed. That's because Minnesota legislators -- with an eye toward stemming the growing methamphetamine problem -- have put together a package of laws to consider this session. A proposal by Rep. Bob Gunther and Sen. Julie Rosen, Fairmont Republicans, would lock cold and allergy medications behind a checkout counter. The medications contain ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, used to make meth in homemade labs. People who want to buy the drugs would need to show identification to prove they're at least 18. The proposal also would prohibit the sale of more than two packages at a time and require store employees to report "suspicious" purchases of certain drugs and household products to their managers, who in turn could report it to police. But Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch said the law could be skirted and misses the point. The real threats are gangs, who bring in up to 80 percent of Minnesota's meth from California and Mexico, he said. Still, Minnesota lawmakers say similar laws have had success in other states, but they weren't enacted until meth use had reached overwhelming proportions. "Minnesota is learning from the mistakes of other states that didn't respond to the problem until it was too late," Rosen said. "We are on the cusp of an ugly epidemic here, if we aren't already in one." Ingredients In Iowa and Oklahoma, where meth is more widespread, state legislators this year have proposed laws that would require pseudoephedrine buyers to show photo ID and to sign for the drug. Some Minnesota stores have set limits on the number of common meth ingredients that a person can buy at once, said Carol Falkowski, a research specialist for the Hazelden Foundation, a Minnesota-based nonprofit chemical-dependency treatment facility. That has changed only recently, said Sgt. Dennin Bauers, head of the Lake Superior Drug Task Force. Duluth retailers were behind the curve, he said. People used to come to Duluth from all over the state to buy the precursor drugs in bulk, Bauers said. Twin Ports convenience stores and pharmacies, including Target and Wal-Mart, have set limits, a News Tribune sampling this week found. The Minnesota Grocers Association, which represents 1,200 stores statewide, for the most part backs the sales portion of the bill, which would make it a misdemeanor to sell to someone younger than 18 and require that the drugs be locked in a display box. However, the association's executive director, Nancy Christensen, said the bill in its current form would be impossible to comply with. She said there isn't enough space to put every product that contains pseudoephedrine behind the counter. Proponents of the bill, though, say putting the products behind the counter also would end the problem of meth makers shoplifting ingredients. Bureau of Criminal Apprehension Special Agent Paul Stevens said the bill's authors decided to target small-time makers because they do the most damage in their communities. Those users tend to be hard-core addicts, and it's where child abuse and neglect problems are found, he said. "The problem is expanding rapidly, and that expansion is not expected to stop anytime soon, particularly if we do not act strongly," said Deborah Durkin, a Minnesota Department of Health environmental health specialist. Duluthian Terry "Brian" Parsons, who was addicted to meth for 31 years, said government controls of the precursor drugs may have an effect, if limited, on the drug trade. The Gang Factor Hatch said he doesn't believe such restrictions will reduce the problem. Meth-making rings employ a method called "smurfing," in which they use multiple people to buy the maximum number of items at different stores, Hatch said. "The laws that are being proposed... are a bit outmoded," Hatch said. "Methamphetamine is largely perceived to be made in the trunk of a car or somebody's kitchen -- that it's not mass distributed. "Now gangs have gotten involved. What was once perceived to be a drug in a trailer park is now easily accessible throughout the country and state," he said. "'If you want to address this issue, you gotta fund the Gang Strike Force," Hatch said. The Minnesota Gang Strike Force, which coordinates gang-crime investigations, was created in 1997. It has 60 officers from police departments statewide, including Duluth, where the regional headquarters are; state and local money pays for the officers. Gov. Tim Pawlenty's administration cut most of its biannual $3.6 million budget to balance last year's budget deficit. Much of it was later restored, but only temporarily. Hatch said he proposes fully reinstating Gang Strike Force money. This year, Commissioner of Public Safety Rich Stanek proposed combining the Gang Strike Force with the Drug Advisory Task Force -- which distributes federal money to regional drug task forces across the state, including those in Duluth and Virginia -- to save money. But Hatch said the result would be fewer resources dedicated to drug and gang investigations. "It is not the time to scale back, but if we're not raising taxes and not spending what we know we should, we have to cut back," said Rep. Mary Murphy, DFL-Hermantown, who added that the task force issue has not been decided. In addition, some officers on the regional drug task forces, created in 1990, fear their funding may not make it to next year because the Bush administration didn't include a $704 million grant in its budget proposal. Wisconsin Approach Three years ago, the Wisconsin Department of Criminal Investigation created a statewide methamphetamine initiative, with $1 million annually in federal money. Minnesota doesn't have a statewide initiative, although state law enforcement agents said they are trying to arrange the federal money for one. The Eau Claire, Wis.-based initiative coordinates 112 state and local officers, which hunt down meth labs and clean them up, said Cindy Giese, Department of Criminal Investigation special agent in charge. It also established a public education program and a Superior satellite office for the department. Meth cases in the five-county Northwestern Wisconsin region are the priority of the office's two special agents. "There is an increased presence of meth (in Northwestern Wisconsin), but we're not seeing a lot of lab activity," she said. "But that's probably because they're seeing it in Minnesota." Giese said the program, especially the education aspect, has helped keep Wisconsin's meth problem in check. She said the program has made presentations in every school in Northwestern Wisconsin. In 1999, eight meth labs were discovered in Wisconsin; last year, Wisconsin authorities found 111 meth labs. But that is almost four times fewer than Minnesota found. No anti-meth measures are before the Wisconsin Assembly, but last year, lawmakers raised possession of meth from a misdemeanor to a felony to put the law in line with Minnesota's. Awareness Minnesota's Rosen-Gunther bill is the brainchild of a Martin County narcotics officer fed up with the meth problem there. The Minnesota departments of Health, Agriculture, Transportation and Public Safety have worked on it. One aspect of the bill sets up a retail education fund. It would help pay for a statewide publicity campaign to help store employees recognize when people are making suspicious purchases and report them to their bosses or to authorities. Suspicious transactions are defined as those that would lead a "reasonable person to believe that the substance is likely to be used to illegally manufacture a controlled substance." Fred Friedman, Northeastern Minnesota's chief public defender, takes issue with the bill's suspicious-activity provisions. "It's no secret that the backrooms of all the stores have these signs up already that say, 'If you see someone buy this or that or this, call us,' " he said. "They're trying to turn everybody into the Gestapo." Other Midwest states have begun large-scale meth-educational campaigns in recent years. The bill's measures are "good first steps, but they are not solutions to the problem," Murphy said. "Until people become aware and see how the meth creeps up on their community, there's not a whole lot you can do." Murphy and many drug-rehabilitation experts said what's needed are education programs of every kind, for as many segments of the population as possible. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake