Pubdate: Tue, 29 Mar 2005 Source: Greenwood Commonwealth (MS) Copyright: 2005 Greenwood Commonwealth Contact: http://www.gwcommonwealth.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1541 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH EPIDEMIC ENDANGERS CHILDREN Perhaps the saddest aspect of the crystal methamphetamine-manufacturing binge upon which too many Mississippians embark is the children whose lives and health are disrupted by the drug. Law enforcement officers on the Gulf Coast say that meth production in homes where children live continues to be a problem, in spite of a number of laws that assess harsh penalties on adults who do this. As an example, lawmen raided a meth lab in a duplex and found that a 4-year-old who lived in the home tested positive for meth. But they said the meth production process is so toxic that a 3-year-old living in the other side of the duplex also tested positive for the drug - just by breathing the air around his home. The meth epidemic has prompted lawmen and social service agencies to work more closely together to address the needs of children who live with drugs. In the past, authorities would remove a child from a house whose residents were accused of making drugs and let a relative keep them. Now, they are taking them to hospitals for health tests and placing them in protective custody. It is a wise move. The continued seizure of home-based meth labs speaks to the addictive power of the drug, since there are harsh penalties for those caught making it. It is illegal to possess two or more of the ingredients used to make meth. If authorities prove intent to manufacture, a suspect can go to jail for up to 30 years. It is also illegal to possess more than 250 doses of meth ingredients like pseudoephedrine, which is found in many over-the-counter cold medications, or to possess another ingredient, anhydrous ammonia, without a license. Violating that law brings five years, but the punishment is doubled under another law if children 18 or younger are present where meth is made. To hear lawmen talk, the meth problem isn't going away, which very probably means that people will continue to risk cooking the drug in their own homes. If so, that will leave Mississippi with a huge number of children whose health has been harmed and whose lives have been uprooted by their parents' inability to resist the siren song of drugs. The scourge of meth, along with other drugs, will continue to place a heavy burden on Mississippi's social services, at a time when the state can ill afford it. It is one more ingredient in the state's difficult financial recipe. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin