Pubdate: Sun, 27 Mar 2005 Source: Dispatch, The (IL) Copyright: 2005 Moline Dispatch Publishing Company, L.L.C. Contact: http://www.qconline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1306 Author: Amy Thon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Meth labs take toll on kids Bill Peyton has seen firsthand what methamphetamine can do to families, especially to children. Neglect, abuse, exposure to dangerous chemicals -- the cases have grown as meth's use has grown, he and others said recently. Alcohol abuse has been the traditional No. 1 drug problem in Illinois, while marijuana was second for years, said Mr. Peyton, southern regional administrator for the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. Now, meth has become the drug of choice in Illinois and Iowa, and its effects are becoming more obvious to communities dealing with the epidemic. "Meth went from off the chart -- not even seeing it -- to a quick second in a two-or three-year period. It's increasingly a drug of choice," Mr. Peyton said. "We're seeing more meth. It's affecting more children." Local law-enforcement agencies have handled more methamphetamine cases in recent years, said Rene Sandoval, director of Quad City Metropolitan Enforcement Agency. "Several years ago, we actually weren't having any methamphetamine labs in the Quad-Cities area," he said. "You can almost see it sweeping across the state." Ingredients to make the drug, including common cold medicines, often are readily available, and rural areas give meth "cookers" space to operate undetected by neighbors or police. Thousands of children across the country have been taken from their meth-abusing parents in recent years, placed with relatives or shifted into already overloaded foster-care systems. Scores of youngsters nationwide have been injured, and a dozen or more have been killed. Thousands have been born with traces of meth in their bodies. A high percentage of children taken from homes where meth labs are operating test positive for the drug in their bodies because the substances used to make it are around the home, Mr. Peyton said. And those ingredients are dangerous. "When a child is in a meth lab, especially smaller children, they are extremely vulnerable to the toxic fumes and the toxic waste that is in that home," Mr. Sandoval said. Making one pound of meth produces five to six pounds of hazardous waste, he said. Chemicals used to make meth also can explode. When they are combined, they produce poisonous fumes. Police wear protective suits and breathing devices when they go into a meth lab. "Obviously, those children aren't wearing protective clothing, and they are breathing those toxic fumes," Mr. Sandoval said. "The children don't have any control, and they definitely need people to protect them." Children who live with meth labs often suffer from neglect and sometimes abuse from their addicted parents. Because meth is a relatively new drug, state agencies still are working out how to respond. The state police, attorney general's office and Department of Children and Family Services are working out procedures on how to handle drug-endangered children. The so-called protocol will include medical procedures and tests. "What do we need to do medically for them? Even medical providers are a little behind the curve on what tests need to be done," Mr. Peyton said. The state takes custody of children found in homes with meth labs and places them with foster parents, Mr. Peyton said. "Just because parents are using meth, we can't say they don't have the same rights as any other parent," he said. "If they can successfully overcome the issues that are causing risk for their children, they can regain custody of their children." Since the state tries to find children permanent homes within two years of entering the system, some parents can't resolve their problems in time to get their children back, Mr. Peyton added. "Because of the guidelines we operate under in trying to reach permanency within a couple years, we run into instances where parents may fail," he said. Angela White, a clinical evaluator at the Rock Island County Council on Addictions, said meth addicts can be rehabilitated. "The person has to not just get off the drugs and realize they have to go a different way, a different lifestyle, they also have to be willing to know it's going to take time to do this," she said. "They are going to have to make major changes." Counselors help parents with their rehabilitation, to return to the community and provide an adequate place for their children to live, she said. "Unfortunately, there have been cases where the children haven't been returned," she said. "You have to do what's in the best interest of the child, and, unfortunately, it's not necessarily with the biological parent." The Associated Press contributed to this report. Meth facts - -- Iowa ranks third nationally in the number of methamphetamine seizures. Illinois is ninth. - -- Authorities have dismantled more than 50,000 clandestine meth labs in the United States since 2001, including some 4,000 in Iowa. - -- About 30 percent of meth labs are "mom-and-pop" operations in homes where children live. - -- Nearly 1,100 meth labs were found in Illinois in 2003, according to the state attorney general's office. - -- The amount of meth seized by the Illinois State Police increased from 3,433 grams during in 1994 to 26,597 grams in 2003 -- a 675 percent increase, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager