Pubdate: Sun, 17 Apr 2005 Source: Sun Herald (MS) Copyright: 2005, The Sun Herald Contact: http://www.sunherald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/432 Author: Robin Fitzgerald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH USE CONTROLS, WEAKENS FAMILY TIES Grandmother: Kids Suffered The Most GULFPORT - After their parents' first arrest on methamphetamine charges, four South Mississippi siblings felt safe enough to tell relatives about the horrors of living in a meth-infested home. The children often were home alone while their parents went left to gather ingredients to cook , sell or use meth, their grandmother said. At other times, the home was a party place for drug users and a clandestine lab for cooking the illegal drug. "One time, the kids ate onions and mustard just to keep from going hungry. That's all there was to eat in the house," said June, who asked that her real name not be used. "The kids know every ingredient used to make meth because they grew up around it," she said. "It ruined a marriage, and the children were severely neglected. They may have problems the rest of their lives." The plight of June's family is becoming all too common. In Harrison County alone, more than 100 meth-related arrests last year indicate a mere minimum number of families affected by the highly addictive drug. "It seems like once you use meth, you become programmed to want more," she said. "After a while, family doesn't matter." June's grandchildren went to live with different relatives following their parents' arrests. At the time, there wasn't a legal mechanism requiring automatic removal of children from meth homes or testing for possible exposure. Since then, the state Bureau of Narcotics has developed a Drug Endangered Children program that also coordinates medical and social service intervention. As many as 80 percent of children from meth homes who are tested do test positive for meth from the fumes, said Harrison County Sheriff George H. Payne Jr. "Meth's not only affecting the users," Payne said. "It's affecting children, even children who live next door to a home where a meth lab is in operation. It's affecting senior citizens and shut-ins being kept by people who make meth in their home. We're dealing with this on a daily basis." June said she hoped a drug conviction would keep her daughter and son-in-law away from meth. It didn't. While on probation, they tested positive for meth. The parents are undergoing court-ordered substance abuse treatment and parenting classes. Their children remain with relatives. "I just hope my daughter can wake up and come to her senses," said June. "Her children need her, and I want her to be herself again." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom