Pubdate: Tue, 11 Oct 2005 Source: Carlsbad Current-Argus (NM) Copyright: 2005 Carlsbad Current-Argus Contact: http://www.currentargus.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2549 Author: Karen Polly Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH EPIDEMIC HAS BINGAMAN'S ATTENTION CARLSBAD - Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., met Monday with members of the Carlsbad Community Anti-Drug/Gang Coalition and local law enforcement officers to get input on how methamphetamines are affecting Carlsbad and to discuss ways the government can assist in combating meth production. Bingaman spoke about two bills he is co-sponsoring, including the Combat Meth Act and the COPS Reauthorization Act. The Combat Meth Act is a bipartisan bill aimed at curbing methamphetamine production by requiring stores to move pseudoephedrine, a primary ingredient in methamphetamine, behind pharmacy counters. The COPS Reauthorization Act would provide $1.15 billion to continue the Community Oriented Policing Services and help law enforcement hire police officers and purchase new equipment. "We're going to try to get both of these bills passed," Bingaman said. Local law enforcement officers told Bingaman one of the most positive developments locally in fighting drugs was the development of Mayor Bob Forrest's Carlsbad Community Anti-Drug/Gang Coalition. "It (drug sales) is not a police problem - it's a community problem," Pecos Valley Drug Task Force Commander Robert Sullivan said, noting the community is finally playing a role in the war on drugs. Eddy County Sheriff Kent Waller said he agreed with Sullivan that the community coalition has tried to educate all facets of the community on the problem. While sometimes communities push to make changes occasionally, Waller said most times after six months, such efforts generally die. This has not been the case with the community coalition, he said. "The coalition stepped out and brought the community together," Waller said. "The most positive thing is the interaction." County Commissioner Janell Whitlock, a former Carlsbad municipal judge, said the best measurement for the community coalition is how long it has been going and how many people are still actively involved. "I feel the coalition is proactive rather than reactive," she said. Eve Flannigan, a member of the community coalition, said a study of local teens last year allowed the coalition to see where problems are. Bullying, drug use and the age of first drug and alcohol use among Carlsbad teems were much higher than the national average , she said. Police Chief Darrin McGilvray said the addition of school resource officers in Carlsbad schools has helped. "We've seen a tremendous turnaround at the schools," McGilvray said. Bingaman said Carlsbad and Eddy County may be ahead of the state and the rest of the country in developing a community coalition to address drug problems, but he had several questions. He said he was interested in knowing whether meth in Eddy County is home grown or coming over the Mexican border, whether meth was the main drug problem in the area and what is being done in the schools. "It doesn't have the attractiveness of some other drugs," Bingaman said, noting that methamphetamine is particularly hard on the health of users. But Sullivan said the reason meth is more attractive to users is that the high lasts for days. For the same cost that a user could be high for 30 minutes on cocaine, a meth user could be high for two to three days, he said. Sullivan said, "Meth is our No. 1 problem." Sullivan said in 2003-04 meth seizures increased in this area by 1,000 percent, outpacing the rest of the state. Most methamphetamine comes across the border, he said, being manufactured in Mexico in large, highly pure quantities. Meth created in small laboratories in New Mexico tends to be about 25 percent pure, Sullivan said, while the drugs created in Mexico are generally 80 percent pure or better. Large drug organizations in Mexico that once specialized in marijuana or cocaine have increased their offerings to include methamphetamine, he added. Prices of methamphetamine have dropped as the supply over the Mexican border has increased, Sullivan said, with an ounce costing $2,400 in 2000, but now only $800. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman