Pubdate: Wed, 23 Jun 2004 Source: Herald-Citizen (TN) Copyright: 2004 Herald-Citizen, a division of Cleveland Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.herald-citizen.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1501 Author: Lindsay McReynolds, Herald-Citizen Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH AWARENESS CAMPAIGN BEGINS Upper Cumberland officials and law enforcement hope that a new community awareness campaign will help make the public more knowledgeable on the dangers of the illegal drug methamphetamine. Last week, 13th Judicial District Attorney Bill Gibson unveiled the meth prevention handbook and presented 100,000 copies of the book to be distributed by law enforcement agencies across the Upper Cumberland region. "Our goal is to put one in each citizen's hands," Gibson said at a press conference last week that included law enforcement leaders from across the region as well as state lawmakers. "We hope the word will spread, and we hope lives will be saved," he said. The handbook, put together by the 13th Judicial District Drug Task Force, was made possible through a $500,000 federal grant for meth education in the district. "We were notified about the grant last spring by Congressmen Bart Gordon and Lincoln Davis," Gibson said. "In the darkest hour of the state budget, this money was a Godsend." At last week's press conference, Gibson asked law enforcement leaders across the region their intentions of making the book available to the public. Cookeville Police Chief Bob Terry said his department would be mailing 12,000 copies of the handbook to residents of Cookeville as well as making them available to the public at his office, while Putnam Sheriff David Andrews said he would probably be relying on a new explorer post and an active reserve unit to be distributing the books to residents in the county. "This seems to be an excellent opportunity to get the community involved," State Rep. Jere Hargrove said. "Fraternities and sororities often look for these kinds of things as community service projects. We can use this as an outreach and get the message out. And it will make a lasting impression on those who help." State Sen. Charlotte Burks agreed. "I think hanging copies on doors may be more effective," she said. "We could get youth groups to be part of it." "We need copies of this to mail to our colleagues in the Senate and House," Burks said. "Meth is beginning to be a statewide problem." "As a member of the task force, it's terribly clear that there's a need for education," Sullivan Smith said. "This is a landmark step to provide sound, fundamental information people want. This will prompt discussions, community groups. It helps citizens be part of the solution." In addition to funding the production of the meth prevention handbook, the federal grant also certified 40 law officers to enter meth labs, provided equipment for disassembling meth labs, provided protective outerwear for law officers and a computer program that specifically tracks meth-related convictions and information on those suspected of housing meth labs. Also, Gibson said that 40 mental health drug counselors in the Upper Cumberland area have been trained in dealing with meth addicts. "We've tried to attack it on all fronts -- prosecution, prevention and treatment," Gibson said. To get a copy of the meth prevention handbook, stop by your local law enforcement agency. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake