Pubdate: Sat, 03 Apr 2004 Source: Catoosa County News, The (GA) Copyright: 2004 The Catoosa County News Contact: http://www.catoosanews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3324 Author: Randall Franks Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CATOOSA TO FORM METH TASK FORCE Officials Look For Ways To Halt 'Epidemic' To fight on the local level what authorities around the country are calling an epidemic of frightening proportions, Catoosa leaders last week convened to discuss establishing a methamphetimine task force. Catoosa County Board of Commissioners Chairman Winford Long on March 31 asked Catoosa Coroner Vanita Hullander to head the task force during a quarterly commissioners meeting with the county's elected officials at the Colonnade. Hullander suggested the committee aggressively look at ways to combat Catoosa's growing meth problem, which she described as "a bigger epidemic than HIV. "It is a community disease - it's not just a law enforcement problem," Hullander said. "Most users are back on the drug after being out of jail for a week. The lifespan of a meth cooker (manufacturer) is about two years. They can make it anywhere. Even in the back of a truck." The coroner said that meth users face tremendous health problems that will eventually lead to deaths. Chronic use of t Catoosa County commissioners and elected officials meet March 31 at the Colonnade for a quarterly meeting. The group focused on the rampant meth use plaguing Catoosa. (Staff photo by Randall Franks) he drug, commonly known as crank or ice, is also contributing to significant increases in child abuse and domestic violence, she said. Hullander said she wants to bring together agencies that are experiencing the effects of the drug to develop information on how it is directly impacting the county and create ways to combat the problem and deal with its effects. Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit District Attorney Herbert "Buzz" Franklin said that his office has gotten a lot of meth-related convictions in recent years. "The judges are giving the manufacturers a lot of time, but it is not unusual for them to get out on bond, be charged again, get out on another bond and be charged again," he said. "Sometimes they can have as many as five different charges before we get them to court." The district attorney noted an instance when an inmate even devised a functioning meth lab in the judge's chambers at the Dade County Courthouse last year. Franklin said meth offenders are entitled to bail under the law. He said one approach his office is considering to assist in the problem is to develop a drug court in the circuit. Catoosa County Sheriff Phil Summers said meth manufacture and usage constitutes the number one drug-related crime in the county. The after-effects of meth withdrawal on county inmates make it extremely costly to the county, he said. Summers said taxpayers are forced to pay for the medical care of inmates as a result of the devastating health effects of the drug. The average inmate arrested for meth use cannot make bond and spends an average of six months in jail, he said. Local meth users range in age from teenagers to 70-year-olds, with most being between 15 and 35, the sheriff said. "It is damaging a lot of people," he said. "One of the trends we are seeing is we cannot even use them as informants. You can't believe what they say. You can't trust them." Staff writer Kevin Cummings contributed to this article. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin