Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jan 2005 Source: Tri-City Herald (WA) Copyright: 2005 Tri-City Herald Contact: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/459 Author: Genoa Sibold-Cohn , Herald, staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) CHILDREN OF ADDICTS PAY HIGH TOLL IN METH EPIDEMIC Doug Stanley was overwhelmed by a chemical haze as the door swung open to Gary Wayne Walker's home in Finley on Christmas Day 2000. The Benton County sheriff's detective quickly tracked the fumes to a methamphetamine lab set up in a bedroom of the Schuster Road home. Just across the hallway, two young girls were in the bathroom, playing in the bathtub. Stanley, one of two officers assigned to the Benton County Methamphetamine Abatement Team, can't forget that image. The two girls were placed in foster care, joining about 250 other children in a steadily growing foster care population in Benton and Franklin counties. Behind that number are two other bleak statistics. About 65 percent to 70 percent of the kids living in foster care or with relatives in the two counties are there because of their parents' methamphetamine abuse, according to Bryan Ovens, a state assistant attorney general based in Kennewick. And the number of foster kids in the two counties has increased at a rate that is more than double the state rate as a whole. A state official says that's because the Tri-Cities has a much higher rate of meth use since it is on a main meth trade route. "That's why we're seeing skyrocketing in our caseloads," said Ken Nichols, Region 2 administrator for the state Division of Children and Family Services in Yakima. The basic cost for each child in foster care is $6,000 a year for housing, food and clothing. Another $4,000 often is tacked on for counseling and supervised visits with parents. Because the number of meth-afflicted families is increasing so rapidly, the total foster care cost for their children is estimated to be at least $975,000 a year in Benton and Franklin counties. That compares with $525,000 for children who are in foster care for other reasons or because of other drugs. State taxpayers pay 50 percent to 68 percent of these costs, Nichols said. The rest is covered by federal matching dollars. More troubling is that many of the meth-affected children will never return home. "We have our new kind of orphans here," said Dr. Sharon Ahart, a Kennewick pediatrician who routinely examines children after they are removed from meth homes and placed in foster care. Fewer than 30 percent of meth-addicted parents regain custody of their children within the two years allowed by the state, said Shannon Sullivan, a state Child Protective Services Intake supervisor in Richland. "The kids stay in foster care longer than with other drugs," agreed Benton-Franklin Juvenile Court Commissioner Lonna Malone, who hears 25 to 30 dependency hearings a week involving Benton County children. Meth is the root problem in the majority of those cases. Malone said the reason the kids stay in foster care longer is because it's harder for meth addicts to overcome their addiction. She said the parents often face clinical depression because meth permanently changes the brain and nothing gives them pleasure. Next month, Benton and Franklin counties plan to introduce the Benton-Franklin Family Drug Treatment Court, which aims to increase the chances of reuniting parents and kids. Sullivan said the goal is to reunite 70 percent of the parents in the program with their children. Officials also hope the program will alleviate the rising number of foster care kids in Benton and Franklin counties, where the foster care population has jumped 62 percent in the past decade from 154 to 250 children. Across the state, the total foster care population has grown by 25 percent to include 8,823 kids, compared with 7,043 a decade ago. There are no statistics available to compare the number of Mid-Columbia kids in foster care because of meth with other counties or the overall state average. That's because the Department of Social and Health Services doesn't track whether a child is in foster care because of substance abuse, said agency spokeswoman Kathy Spears in Olympia. Children are removed from parents' care if there is evidence of abuse or neglect, she said. Another program aims to help the youngest children affected by substance abuse. The state's Safe Babies, Safe Moms program tries to help pregnant women and mothers of children under age 3 give up their drug habits and rebuild their lives. The program, which has operated in the Tri-Cities for five years, helps low-income women who are drug- and alcohol-addicted get treatment and services for their children. Three-quarters of the 120 Safe Babies, Safe Moms clients have used meth, said supervisor Shelley Little. But Ahart believes existing programs for meth-abusing parents don't do enough to combat the epidemic. "These Band-Aids are not working," she said. Meth-abusing parents should face surprise home visits, intensive drug screenings and close monitoring of their disciplinary skills, Ahart said. She also believes a state social worker should coordinate with schools and physicians to monitor the children's performance in school and detect learning or developmental disabilities. Joseph Schneider, Benton-Franklin Juvenile Court commissioner, said the family drug court program will cover all of these areas, address financial needs and provide psychological evaluations and parenting classes. Although the program will be open to parents who abuse any illegal drug or alcohol, the majority of the participants likely will be meth-addicted. Seventy to 80 percent of current dependency cases involve meth, said Schneider, who will preside over the program's court matters. When programs to combat meth fall short, the cost is horrific to children living in meth homes. The mental picture of an infant in a crib cradling a bottle of curdled milk is burned into the memory of Pasco Sgt. Mike Monroe, who worked on the Tri-City Metro Drug Task Force for five years. He also recalls seeing a can of acetone, which can explode when heated, hidden in a stove at another child's house. And Kennewick Detective Rick Runge hasn't forgotten the 6-month-old baby who lived in a meth-lab home where a pig, ferret and cats had defecated all over the floor. "The place was so bad that they bulldozed it," Runge said. "When people are on meth, they don't recognize the filth that they're living in or exposing their children to," added Runge, who has investigated roughly 300 meth labs in Kennewick since 1999. At a meth lab on Kennewick's Cleveland Street, bags of baby clothing were mixed with drug pipes, he said, and Mason jars used to make meth were soaking in the sink with baby bottles. Meth residue often contaminates countertops, carpets show chemical spills, and meth oil, a solvent that contains suspended meth, is commonly stored in the refrigerator or freezer, Runge said. All usually are within the reach of children. Less than a year after Stanley and other deputies busted Walker at his Finley home for meth manufacturing, the same Schuster Road house was being used by another couple to make meth. When their meth-cooking operation ignited a fire, Lisa Budde and her boyfriend, Terry Lynn Snyder, carried their meth-making ingredients outside before returning to get her 3-year-old daughter, whom they had left inside the burning house. The girl was placed in foster care. "The children ... they're the biggest victims," Stanley said. "They don't have a choice. They can't leave." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth