Pubdate: Tue, 20 Sep 2005 Source: Daily Sentinel (TX) Copyright: 2005 Cox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.dailysentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3023 Author: Emily Taravella, The Daily Sentinel Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/tulia.htm (Tulia, Texas) DRUG TASK FORCE FACES FUNDING QUESTIONS The Deep East Texas Narcotics Task Force faces an uncertain future, with regard to program funding. "We were notified that the funding, as we know it, will end March 31, 2006," Sheriff Thomas Kerss said. "It will be replaced with something else, but no one knows exactly what that will consist of or what it will mean for local jurisdictions." The one thing that Kerss does know is that East Texas and other areas throughout the state will experience a significant loss in law-enforcement resources, come April 1. Drug task forces throughout the state have been scrambling to find funding, since Congress cut the allocation Texas receives through the Edward Byrne Memorial grant by nearly a third. Late last spring, County Judge Sue Kennedy received notification from the governor's office advising her that the existing grant could be extended through Sept. 30. Commissioners requested and received the extension and waited to see what would happen next. On Sept. 16 Kerss received notification by e-mail that the county could apply for a six-month funding cycle due to start Oct. 1 and end March 31. "We have to fill out our application and get it submitted to the Criminal Justice Division of the governor's office before the end of September," he said. "That's not much time to complete the task or to think this through." Although the governor's office has indicated some funds will still be available in the future, for narcotics task forces, Kerss said there has been no clear indication as to how that money will be dispersed. "It may be mid-to late-March before we know," he said. "It's too early to predict what this means, but needless to say, we're disappointed in the decision and the way it's come about." Some larger metropolitan areas may step up their own operations to adjust for losses, Kerss said. In rural areas, local jurisdictions that are member agencies of the task force won't be able to absorb the positions, he said. "The direct end result means fewer officers on the streets fighting the single greatest crime problem we face today," he said. "Either directly or indirectly, close to 90 percent of the crimes we face today are associated with drugs in some way, shape or fashion. We're about to remove an enforcement branch geared solely to that type of enforcement activity." Kerss said it is his opinion that those in the criminal justice division of the governor's office are making decisions based on negative publicity surrounding the activities of other task forces, such as the one in Tulia where 44 people - 37 of whom were black - were arrested by a white officer working alone without audio or video surveillance. Gov. Rick Perry later granted pardons to 35 of those convicted. "That was in 1999, and there have been a number of proactive measures put in place to ensure those types of situations don't reoccur," Kerss said. "In my opinion, his office is reacting to something that has been addressed and rectified." Ironically, Kerss said the governor's decision comes on the heels of the federal government announcing intentions to add dollars to narcotics enforcement grant funds that were initially cut. "Because people who are dependent on drugs commit other crimes - if we don't have narcotics enforcement taking place - it leaves us susceptible in other areas," he said. "I'm worried about the negative impact this could have on our community, as a whole, and what it will do for crime rates across the state." Kerss said he's concerned about the 22 employees who work for the Deep East Texas Narcotics Task Force and their families. "Eight agencies are represented by this task force," he said. "It's frustrating. I don't think this decision was made with due consideration for how it's going to affect our local citizens and those throughout Texas." Kerss said the annual budget for the task force is $1.16 million, of which the state funded a little more than 50 percent. Roughly 40 percent was funded by project income, which includes all other revenues including forfeiture and member agency participation fees, he said. Each participating agency provides $13,900. The nine participating agencies in the Deep East Texas Regional Narcotics Trafficking Task Force include Diboll, Angelina County, Crockett, Houston County, Nacogdoches and Nacogdoches County, Hemphill and Sabine County and Tyler County. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman