Pubdate: Tue, 20 Apr 2004 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2004 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Benita Y. Williams COUNTY REINSTATES SOME FUNDS FOR DARE The Jackson County Legislature on Monday voted to restore funding for area Drug Abuse Resistance Education programs to 2003 levels. Without the additional $118,000, police departments said they would have had to cut DARE programs this year. "No one will have to cut a DARE officer or a DARE program," said Legislator Dan Tarwater, the sponsor of the proposal and chairman of the Legislature's anti-drug committee. The additional money will come from the county's surplus fund for the Community-Backed Anti-Drug Tax known as COMBAT. Earlier this year, the amount of COMBAT money given to DARE was cut $231,000, or about 18 percent of the $1.29 million the programs received in 2003. In March, the Legislature restored $112,630 mistakenly cut due to a math error. Law enforcement officials on Monday thanked the legislators for restoring $188,000 to DARE, but said they need another $291,000 to meet their entire 2004 COMBAT funding requests. The officers questioned why more money was not available to DARE while COMBAT surplus funds were being spent on increases to other anti-drug tax programs. Sgt. Steve Seward, the DARE supervisor for the Kansas City Police Department, said funding for his department has dropped about $110,000 over the past six years. The request for more DARE funds "is not a money grab An injustice has been done," Seward said. COMBAT is a quarter-cent sales tax used to fund law enforcement, drug treatment and drug prevention programs. On Monday, legislative auditor Kelly Markham Stegall issued a report about how $6.4 million from COMBAT surplus funds is earmarked to be spent this year. Spending includes: * $2.3 million for improvements at the county jail and criminal justice buildings. * $270,000 for the county's information system. * $187,600 for the circuit court's computer system. Stegall said in her report that, "The funds were spent on programs other than those designated" in the 1995 guidelines adopted by the county Legislature. A spokesman for County Executive Katheryn Shields said spending on the jail was included in the guidelines, but argued the guidelines do not apply to COMBAT surplus funds. However, Independence Police Chief Fred Mills continued to question the surplus fund expenditures. Troy Thomas, the county's chief financial officer, said the questioned expenditures paid for programs involving drug offenders, drug treatment and the administrative costs of COMBAT. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake