Pubdate: Mon, 17 Jan 2005 Source: Leader-Telegram (WI) Copyright: 2005 Leader-Telegram Contact: http://www.leadertelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3301 Author: Don Huebscher Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) TIME TO NIP METH PROBLEM IN THE BUD People who make and use methamphetamine threaten our relatively safe communities; it's time to fight back. Investigators say those who recently broke into a south side Eau Claire home, robbed and traumatized the family were meth addicts desperate for money to fuel their addiction. The incident is a high-profile example of a troubling trend. Meth arrests in Eau Claire jumped from 11 in 2003 to 47 last year. In a comprehensive look at the burgeoning meth problem in the area published last August, the Leader-Telegram reported the number of meth labs seized in Wisconsin has soared from eight in 1999 to 112 in 2003. Unfortunately for us, most of those discoveries were in this part of the state, specifically from Eau Claire west to the state line. Another sign of the growing scope of the problem can be found in the number of people being treated for addiction to meth. The L.E. Phillips Libertas Center drug treatment facility in Chippewa Falls reports admitting 169 people for meth detoxification in 2004, up 70 percent from five years earlier. That averages one addict nearly every other day. Making matters worse is the roughly 40 days it takes meth users to rid their bodies of the poison they've ingested. These goodies include kerosene, lye, ephedrine from cold tablets, lithium from batteries and red phosphorous from the striker plates of matchbooks. Not exactly stuff you'll find on Food Network. Eau Claire Police Chief Jerry Matysik is trying to avoid unduly frightening people, but at the same time he is one of the leading voices for the need to get on top of this problem before it overwhelms us. He has several common-sense suggestions our lawmakers in Madison should study and follow up on as soon as possible. He wants cold medicines and other products with ephedrine taken off publicly accessible shelves in stores so purchases can be monitored. He also called for legislation requiring anhydrous ammonia, a common farm fertilizer, to contain an additive making it ineffective for cooking meth. Matysik also would like to see locks put on all anhydrous ammonia tanks and more aggressive termination of parental rights of meth addicts to protect their children. Finally, he favors tougher sentences for meth makers and users to show we mean business. We don't need to go into panic mode over this, but Matysik is right; lawmakers should take notice of the growing problem and take action. Our No. 1 asset is the relative safety we feel in our communities. We are fairly confident our children can play down at the park or schoolyard without fear some whacked-out meth addict will wander by. If we don't keep this problem from mushrooming, we put everything we have at risk - the quality of our communities, our schools and staggering costs for law enforcement, courts, prisons and human services, to say nothing of the human cost in ruined lives and shattered families. This stuff is nasty. Let's all work to put a stop to it, starting with Matysik's call for legislation to stem the supply of ingredients. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth