Pubdate: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) Copyright: 2005 Lexington Herald-Leader Contact: http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240 Author: Bill Estep FUNDING CUTS COULD CURB DRUG INQUIRIES State's Police Rely On Money From Two Federal Programs Proposed federal funding cuts would hurt efforts by police to fight drugs in Kentucky, particularly in smaller towns and rural areas where police have fewer resources and abuse of prescription pills and methamphetamine is rampant, several police agencies said. President Bush has proposed cutting the budget for the national High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program by more than 50 percent. In Kentucky, 27 counties in the eastern and southern part of the state are in the Appalachia-HIDTA, which provides money for task forces of federal, state and local officers to investigate drug trafficking. Bush also has proposed eliminating a separate pot of money that supports local drug task forces and other crime initiatives. About a dozen drug task forces around Kentucky, as well as the state police and Lexington and Louisville police, received a total of more than $3.5 million this year for drug initiatives from that Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) program, according to the Kentucky Justice and Public Safety Cabinet. Losing that money would require some task forces to lay off agents and cut back investigations in areas where there are few police devoted to such work, or even to shut down, said Dave Gilbert, director of the Lake Cumberland Area Drug Task Force and president of the Kentucky Narcotics Officer's Association. Gilbert said his own agency, which has five agents to do drug investigations in Pulaski, Wayne and McCreary counties, gets 75 percent of its budget from the JAG program. The end of that funding would mean the demise of the task force -- which handled more than 400 cases last year -- and a rise in crime, Gilbert said. "It's going to have a very dramatic negative effect" in some areas if the grants are eliminated, Gilbert said. John Nowacki, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Justice, said the proposed cuts are based on the need to devote as much money as possible to fighting terrorism. The JAG grants also represent a small amount of the total federal assistance for law enforcement, he said. Gilbert, however, said the money has been vital to local task forces. Some police agencies in Kentucky faced with the potential loss of JAG funding also could be hurt by the proposed cut in the HIDTA program. The Appalachia HIDTA, created in 1998, comprises 68 counties in Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia and is headquartered in London. It has an annual budget of just over $6 million. Federal authorities criticized the HIDTA in 2002, in part because federal and state agencies in the task force had taken most of the money, leaving little funding for local police. That has changed the last few years, with former federal agent Frank Rapier as director of the three-state initiative. Local police now get a much larger share -- $1.6 million annually, compared with $145,000 in 2002, Rapier said. Observers said the HIDTA has ironed out earlier problems and is a real asset in the fight against drugs, providing funding and other assistance in areas where local police are stretched thin. "Without the support of the HIDTA, local government has few tools to use," said Beatty-ville Mayor Charles Beach III, a strong backer of the program. The increased funding for local police also means they have more to lose if Congress approves Bush's proposed cut of 56 percent -- $127 million -- in national HIDTA funding. In the Appalachia HIDTA, such a sizable cut would hurt efforts to eradicate marijuana, force the agency to disband or cut back on task forces that helped rack up more than 2,100 drug arrests in the three states last year and greatly reduce money for police training, Rapier said. Rafael Lemaitre, a spokes-man for the Office of National Drug Control Policy, said the administration proposed cuts in the HIDTA budget and a change in oversight because of a federal finding that the program had not been able to demonstrate it was effective in fighting drug trafficking. Lemaitre said Bush is proposing an overall increase of 2.2 percent in drug-control efforts, while concentrating on programs that have achieved demonstrably positive results. Directors of the 30-plus HIDTAs around the country argue that the program has in fact shown positive results, including greater cooperation among police at all levels and thousands of drug convictions. The administration's proposed changes are based on faulty conclusions, according to a position paper from the directors. It is early in the federal budgeting process and it's not clear whether Congress will approve Bush's proposed cuts. Police across the country are working to preserve funding for the JAG and HIDTA programs, and both have support from members of Congress in both parties, including Republican U.S. Rep Hal Rogers, who represents Kentucky's 5th District and has a great deal of clout in the federal budget process. In addition to chairing one budget committee, Rogers sits on the subcommittee that oversees funding for the HIDTA program. He said in a statement that he is a strong supporter of continued funding for the program. "The President's budget is nothing more than a starting point and I will work, as I do every year, to ensure that our nation's HIDTA program is properly funded," Rogers said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin