Pubdate: Wed, 10 Aug 2005 Source: Record, The (Stockton, CA) Copyright: 2005 The Record Contact: http://www.recordnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/428 Author: Greg Kane, Record Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) HEFTY OPERATING COSTS MAY LEAD TO HELICOPTER'S SALE STOCKTON -- A helicopter bought by the San Joaquin County Sheriff's Office in 2002 likely will be sold by the end of the year. The Hughes 500D helicopter was grounded six months ago because it cost too much to operate, said Sheriff Bob Heidelbach. The state's budget crisis and declining federal grants forced officials to lock away the chopper in a hangar at Stockton Metropolitan Airport. "It costs a lot of money to put those up in the air," Heidelbach said Tuesday. "It would really be nice to continue to use the helicopter. But it just got to the point where it isn't cost-effective." Heidelbach is expected to ask county supervisors in early September for permission to sell the helicopter. Once the sale is authorized, it will be advertised in various publications and either auctioned or directly sold, county purchasing agent Cliff Baumer said. The 25-year-old helicopter recently was appraised at $365,000, Baumer said. The county bought the chopper for $400,000 from the Sacramento County Sheriff's Office three years ago. The chopper and a Cessna 206 airplane were acquired using a federal methamphetamine-fighting grant, Heidelbach said. The grant was cut drastically over the past few years -- from $661,000 in 2004-05 to $476,000 this year. In the meantime, the vast majority of the county's air drug surveillance has been done with the plane, which flies higher, makes less noise and isn't easily detected, Heidelbach said. The helicopter is great for population centers such as Los Angeles or counties with rocky or wild terrain, he said, but not as necessary in San Joaquin County. Proceeds from the sale will go toward the San Joaquin Metropolitan Narcotics Task Force, which has lost 10 of 20 agents in the past few years because of budget cuts, Heidelbach said. "We're trying to get a few more bodies," Heidelbach said. "That will help pay for new staffing over the next couple of years." Though the method of sale isn't known, the chopper most likely will be auctioned off, Baumer said. Bidders don't have to be law enforcement agencies, either. "It can be bought on the open market," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth