Pubdate: Sat, 30 Jul 2005 Source: Janesville Gazette (WI) Copyright: 2005 Bliss Communications, Inc Contact: http://www.gazetteextra.com/contactus/lettertoeditor.asp Website: http://www.gazetteextra.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1356 Author: Jay Webster, Capitol News Service ELKHORN LEGISLATOR SAYS COUNTIES SHOULD BE ABLE TO ENACT OWN DRUG LAWS MADISON-All Wisconsin counties should be able to enact their own ordinances on drugs, Sen. Neal Kedzie told a legislative committee this week. Kedzie, R-Elkhorn, told members of the Assembly Committee on Criminal Justice and Homeland Security that his bill, Senate Bill 21, would correct an "oversight in state statutes." Current law allows only Milwaukee County to make arrests within municipalities with law enforcement agencies. Also, only Milwaukee County is authorized to enact ordinances prohibiting the possession, manufacture or delivery of drug paraphernalia. Kedzie's proposal would allow all 72 counties in Wisconsin to enact their own ordinances and require all municipalities in the county to adhere to county ordinances. Joining Kedzie in supporting the legislation were Walworth County Sheriff David Graves and Undersheriff Kurt Picknell. Current law prevents the Walworth County Sheriff's Department from writing a drug paraphernalia possession ordinance in municipalities with drug ordinances, Picknell said. Searches of people or property for drug paraphernalia also are more difficult under current law, he said. "If you are looking into a simple possession of marijuana and you are in a municipality that has an ordinance already enacted, we cannot write a simple possession of marijuana ticket at the scene at that time," Picknell said. The sheriff's department must contact the municipality's police force to search for drug paraphernalia and potentially transfer evidence and materials regarding the case to the municipal police force before the process can be completed, Picknell said. Kedzie said he authored the bill in response to incidents at the Alpine Valley Music Theatre near East Troy in Walworth County. Other problems arise in the case of sheriff's departments similar to those in Walworth County, where small police departments are in the jurisdiction of the sheriff's department, Graves said. "Any time you have to ask a smaller police department to do something like that, I would imagine it is a strain on their personnel," he said. Graves said under Kedzie's bill, in the time it takes under current law to get a local police officer off the road to write a ticket and gather all the information in the case, the case could easily be managed by staff in the sheriff's department. This week's committee session was a public hearing only. No vote on Kedzie's bill was taken. It has already cleared the Senate. If the committee recommends the bill for passage, it will be sent to the Assembly floor for consideration before going to Gov. Jim Doyle's desk for a signature. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin