Pubdate: Fri, 25 Feb 2005
Source: Daily Cardinal (U of WI, Madison, Edu)
Copyright: 2005 The Daily Cardinal Newspaper Corporation
Contact:  http://www.cardinal.wisc.edu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/712
Author: Michael Worringer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

METH SURGE THREATENS TO ENGULF WISCONSIN

Rampant methamphetamine addiction has overwhelmed law enforcement and drug 
treatment facilities in Northern and Western Wisconsin, and the burgeoning 
epidemic will likely overrun the entire state in the next three years.

In an alarming series of testimony before the state's Criminal Justice and 
Homeland Security Committee at the Capitol Wednesday, state police, 
district attorneys and other experts detailed the skyrocketing increase in 
the illegal use and abuse of methamphetamines and the difficulties many 
communities face in combating the problems. Many who gave testimony said 
the Wisconsin Legislature must take action swiftly.

Meth, Violence Spreads Over the River and Through the State

The source of Wisconsin's meth problems lies just across the Mississippi River.

"We are experiencing it coming through the Minneapolis-St. Paul drug 
corridor," said Dr. Shawna Kovach, director of the L.A. Phillips Treatment 
Center, which is located near Eau Claire.

Eau Claire Police Department Police Chief Jerry Matysik said the Twin 
Cities are a major point of meth distribution.

"Much of it is imported from large 'super labs' from gangs in Mexico, 
Southern California and Arizona," Matysik said. He added, however, that 
incidents of homemade meth labs are also drastically increasing in the state.

Although a new phenomenon in Wisconsin-St. Croix County District Attorney 
Erik Johnson said his county, which borders Minnesota, has been dealing 
with methamphetamine abuse for five or six years-it has quickly spiraled 
out of control.

Kovach reported a statewide increase of almost 450 percent in criminal meth 
cases in the past five years (see chart, p. 1).

Lawmakers gasped when Matysik said meth cases in the small city of Eau 
Claire have increased from nine to more than 80 in just the past two years.

"Within two to three years the epidemic will reach the levels in Madison as 
it has in Northwestern Wisconsin," said Rep. Scott Suder, R-Abbotsford, who 
chairs the Criminal Justice and Homeland Security Committee.

With the spread of meth into Wisconsin comes an increase in violence.

"The addiction is so high that [users] will do anything to get it," Kovach 
said.

"This is the largest problem, by far, that we have as law enforcement in 
our region," Matysik said. "We are being so overwhelmed with violence and 
crime and gun crime all related to methamphetamines. It's extremely 
frightening."

A Destructive Addiction

"[The addiction] destroys you from inside out," Kovach said. She said 
methamphetamine addiction often leads to problems including cardiac arrest 
and brain damage as well as psychological disorders like anorexia, bipolar 
disorder, depression and paranoid schizophrenia.

"This is not a drug that can be experimented with without consequences," 
Matysik said.

The drug is derived in part through the use of ephedrine or 
pseudoephedrine, common ingredients found in over-the-counter cold 
medications. It comes in a variety of forms, including powders, crystals 
and tablets. Suder said he was surprised both at how easy methamphetamines 
are to make and how terrible the resulting addiction becomes.

"The horror stories are eye-opening," he said.

Current Treatment Options Limited

Kovach explained that methamphetamine addiction is far more difficult for 
communities to deal with than other types of drug addiction.

"The types of treatment that this type of user needs is much more 
substantial than anyone can and is offering at this time," she said. Meth 
users require a detoxification period of 90 to 120 days before treatment 
can even begin, and with such a rapid increase in the number of cases, 
local communities are struggling to provide the resources to track and 
treat criminals and clean up meth labs.

"It's a huge financial strain," Suder said. "Statewide resources are being 
siphoned off to fight it."

Often communities are finding the easiest way to control known meth addicts 
is to simply incarcerate them.

"I'm not a great believer in imprisoning your problem," Johnson said. "It's 
not an ideal situation. It's costly, but it's something that we know works."

Meth Legislation Difficult

The process of strengthening Wisconsin's methamphetamine laws will not be 
easy. While Suder said penalties for meth use were strengthened two years 
ago, the goal now will be to reduce access to ephedrine-based products such 
as cold pills and to better track meth addicts who are buying them in large 
quantities. One way to do this could be to put cold medications behind the 
counter. However, Mike Bettinga, ShopKo's senior vice president of retail 
health, told the lawmakers that this would be "unnecessarily burdensome on 
the pharmacy community" as well as on consumers.

Until further legislation is approved, Johnson said the entire state must 
recognize the methamphetamine crisis now and start taking preventative 
measures, even if their corner of the state does not have problems at present.

"It's been somewhat frustrating for us," Johnson said, referring to the 
people of Northwestern Wisconsin who have been trying to alert the rest of 
the state. "There's no way you're not going to have a problem in the future."