Pubdate: Sat, 12 Nov 2005 Source: World, The (Coos Bay, OR) Copyright: 2005 Southwestern Oregon Publishing Company Contact: http://www.theworldlink.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1229 Author: Carl Mickelson, Staff Writer NARCOTICS TEAM GETS INCREASED FUNDING The South Coast Interagency Narcotics Team will get a significant boost to its anti-drug efforts next year thanks to the recent passage of a congressional appropriations bill. The agency was notified earlier this week that a part of its federal backing will nearly double, going from $60,000 in 2003 to $100,000 next fall. The funding is part of an omnibus spending bill that now moves on to President George Bush's desk for signature into law. He's expected to sign the bill within the next month. SCINT, formed in 1988 in response to increasing drug crimes on the South Coast, was one of several Oregon agencies that learned of the new funding levels for the coming fiscal year. While SCINT is pleased with the funding, it originally asked for $120,000 from Congress. That amount would have almost covered the costs for two full-time SCINT detectives - one dedicated for Coos County and the other for Curry - said SCINT coordinator and Coos County Sheriff's Det. Sgt. Craig Zanni. Currently, the agency has one full-time investigator, and Zanni who splits his time between investigative and administrative roles. SCINT was forced to shed a full-time officer in September due to a lack of funding. Zanni said he will approach other municipalities and ask them to contribute money to pay the balance if the desire is to have two full-time drug investigators. The door-to-door salesman approach is a familiar tactic to Zanni who has often had to knock on city hall doors to find willing participants in the program. The North Bend Police Department donated one of its officers last year which created a savings to SCINT because it did not have to cover benefits. "There will definitely be one (detective), maybe two depending on who will pick up the difference," Zanni said. Some years SCINT has gone without any federal appropriations and survived on other revenue streams including funding from the Community-Oriented Policing Grant and the Edward Byrne Memorial Grant Program, Zanni said. SCINT administrative aide Julie Simpson said the agency should learn within the next few months the fate of the Byrne grant. Early reports, she said, indicate the grant, that doles out hundreds of millions of dollars annually to law enforcement agencies across the country, could be halved. Zanni said the continually unstable source of funding has kept him up at night at times. "We're teetering on the verge of extinction like the dodo bird was," he said. "We would like to have some money or help - or both. We would take the help over the money." At its peak, SCINT had about 14 investigators working for it in the mid-1990s growing from an initial force of five to six in the late 1980s, Zanni said. Many of those officers were "donated" from local police departments. But, those times are gone. In recent years, Zanni said, with ever-tightening budgets, municipalities have been forced to pinch pennies and recall many of those officers to simply carry out the more routine policing efforts on their home turf. That puts added stress on the few who remain at SCINT who are forced to deal with heavier workloads. And, Zanni said, it could reflect in the success or failure of busting-up drug operations in the future. SCINT was formed, Zanni said, when small-time drug deals escalated into more sophisticated and better organized operations that reached beyond a single police department's jurisdiction. Suddenly, those smaller departments found themselves facing big-time dealers. SCINT was created to share trained drug agents amongst the smaller communities that could not afford them in the first place, Zanni said. That hasn't changed but the money no longer flows like it once did. SCINT is a multi-jurisdictional narcotics task force whose membership comprises officers from South Coast police departments, county sheriff's offices, district attorney's offices and members of the Oregon State Police in Coos, Curry and western Douglas Counties. Other Oregon agencies that will receive funding once the bill is signed into law include: $200,000 for the Lane County Methamphetatmine Abatement Initiative, $450,000 for the Marion County Sheriff's Office Breaking Meth Addiction Program and $50,000 for the Lincoln County Methamphetamine Initiative. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman