Pubdate: Fri, 12 Mar 2004 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2004 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Author: Gary D. Robertson, Associated Press Note: apparent 150 word limit on LTEs Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) OFFICIAL WARNS OF DANGERS TO KIDS "We Feel Confident That This Is The Tip Of The Iceberg", Roy Cooper, Attorney gGeneral RALEIGH, N.C. - Social workers may be accustomed to removing children from squalid homes, but they face threats to their own health when those homes double as methamphetamine labs, Attorney General Roy Cooper warned Thursday. As meth labs spread across the state, county social service offices must equip themselves to help neglected youths who have grown up around dangerous chemicals, Cooper told a meeting of the N.C. Association of County Directors of Social Services. "We feel confident that this is the tip of the iceberg," Cooper said of the recent boom in meth lab busts in the western part of the state. "All of you will see it." Of the 177 labs busted last year in North Carolina, about a quarter contained children. Many of those kids wind up in the social service system. "This is going to be something that overwhelms as it goes across the state, so we might as well be ready to handle it," said Donn Gunderson, director of the Craven County Department of Social Services and a member of a training panel looking at how to protect social workers entering homes where meth labs are housed. The social services director in Alexander County said authorities this week found a meth lab in the bedroom of a 3-year-old. Cooper's office showed the directors photographs taken at homes that have been busted: mounds of trash in the back yards; food packages sitting next to the chemicals used to "cook" the drug; and plastic soda bottles in kitchens now full of meth. "They've become hazardous waste dumps," Cooper said. Meanwhile, "kids are crawling around in jeans and a T-shirt. That's dangerous." The chemicals used to make the highly addictive drug, such as ammonia, lye, antifreeze and the active ingredient in cold tablets, can be purchased in discount and feed stores. When combined, they create hazardous fumes and the potential for explosions. "There are often toxic clouds that are created that cause danger to people who would inhale them," Cooper said. Some law officers have been made sick by inhaling the fumes. Hazardous material teams wear chemical suits while investigating busted labs. The Department of Health and Human Services and county DSS offices are working to write protocols on how to decontaminate children in these situations. Meanwhile, the attorney general's office is using a $312,000 federal grant to train DSS workers in four counties. Insights gleaned from those sessions ultimately will be spread to all 100 counties. Cooper said he'll ask the General Assembly this spring to toughen penalties for people who manufacture methamphetamines. His office also is working with retailers to alert authorities when they see customers purchase excessive amount of meth ingredients, such as over-the-counter cold medicines. Swain County DSS Director John Eller said the meth war is frustrating to fight, especially when the people being arrested for making the drug are passing on the recipe to fellow criminals. The attorney general empathized with Eller and said stemming meth's spread across the state will take vigilance by DSS and police: "Join us in this fight while it's still early." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin