Pubdate: Wed, 11 May 2005 Source: Pilot, The (NC) Copyright: 2005 The Pilot LLC Contact: http://www.thepilot.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1701 Author: Florence Gilkeson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) AGENCIES DETAIL MOORE COUNTY'S GROWING DRUG PROBLEM Moore County Has A Drug Problem. Agencies that deal with the problem work full-time on remedies, but the issues are overwhelming. At their May meeting, members of the MooreHealth Board of Directors heard a first-hand overview of the drug situation from three agencies that deal with victims and perpetrators. "It's not slowing down," said Detective Lt. Gerald Seawell, supervisor of the six-member drug unit of the Moore County Sheriff's Office. "There's so much out there on the street, it's unreal," In 2004, the unit arrested 317 persons on 983 drug charges. Phyllis Magnuson, school health program manager for FirstHealth of the Carolinas, illustrated the magnitude of the problem with a game in which board members stood up in numbers representing the percentage of students with multiple problems in the public schools. Magnuson is a registered nurse certified as a school nurse and holds a master's degree in nursing. She is employed by FirstHealth to coordinate the nursing program in the Moore County Public Schools. Her sobering "game" revealed the ratio of children from homes with such problems as drug abuse, suicides, dropouts, sex and obesity. Teachers are supposed to be in the classroom to provide instruction to students, but Magnuson said they are required to supervise medication for students, to deal with the special needs and special problems of students, as well as maintain discipline. "Teachers are totally overwhelmed in the classroom," Magnuson said. Eugene B. McRae told the board that the public needs to step back and take a careful look at conditions leading to substance abuse. "What's wrong with our society?" McRae asked. McRae is director of the Adult Substance Abuse Services program with Sandhills Center for Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services. He said the jail stays so full that some inmates are released early to make space for others. He said the Department of Social Services works full time with abuse victims, and all treatment centers have long waiting lists. "We can't arrest enough of them," McRae said. "We can't build enough jails. We can't build enough treatment Centers. Is it supply or demand? We have drug dealers because we have drug users." Endless Supply Seawell said law-enforcement agencies cooperate with each other and are successful in arresting dealers and confiscating enormous quantities of illegal drugs, but the supply appears endless, and there is no limit on potential customers. Big loads of illegal drugs are regularly transported along interstate highways across the United States, Seawell said. This has been the case since he began working with the narcotics unit in 1996. "I am amazed at the amount of drugs seized every day in North Carolina and across the United States," Seawell said. "We get the statistics daily. It's astounding. The numbers are astronomical." Seawell said marijuana, cocaine (powder and crack), methamphetamine and other drugs are readily available everywhere. "We hit these places," Seawell said. "We arrest them. They start up again. You keep on cutting down weeds only to have them sprout back up." At this time, the drug problem is concentrated more in the central and northern areas than in the southern end of Moore County, a factor that Seawell said shows a trend toward infiltration of rural areas, rather than in the heavily populated urban communities. Seawell said most of the drugs coming into this area are from Mexico. He said that investigators have learned to search for hidden places in vehicles for electronically operated compartments where drugs are stashed and difficult to detect. Most of the methamphetamine labs are "mom-and-pop operations" and are often found in homes, Seawell said. So far, no meth labs have been found in Moore County, but Seawell said it is only a matter of time before a lab is uncovered here. The problem is making its way eastward from the mountains of North Carolina. Montgomery County officers raided their first meth lab just a week ago. Seawell said a child under the age of one was found in that home. The boy had a rash all over his body from exposure to the drug, and so did the adults in the household. Much of the meth comes into this area from Georgia or some other distant point, but meth can be easily concocted in the home because the ingredients are available at the drugstore, supermarket or department store, if not already in the home. "Some of them are like walking zombies," Seawell said of drug addicts. "And no area in this county is immune." All law-enforcement agencies handle drug cases, but the Sheriff's Office is the only agency in Moore County with a full-time unit assigned to the problem. Seawell said his unit has been successful in its investigations, but the six officers continue to work around the clock and still cannot curb the flow of illegal drugs into the community. Bigger Than Law Enforcement McRae said this task would remain unending until society faces the issues that create this environment. "We need to step back as a society and a culture and ask what we did to get in this condition," McRae said. "We're the biggest drug user in the world." Afghanistan is the leading producer of illegal narcotics and continues to supply its biggest user, the United States. "We have to be honest about ourselves and stop calling what is wrong right," McRae said. McRae said it is frightening to hear parents exclaim their relief upon learning that their children have been arrested for using marijuana. They're relieved that it's not cocaine or heroin, or worse. But McRae said that pot is still illegal and is a drug that abusers frequently start with. He called the issue "bigger than law enforcement" and blamed much of the trouble on the permissiveness of society today. "I don't have any easy solution," McRae said. "It's a very tough issue. I hope we're up to it." Derry Walker, a MooreHealth board member, introduced the speakers. After the meeting, the Rev. David Hudson, chairman, said the board would discuss the issues raised during the program at a future meeting. MooreHealth is a nonprofit volunteer organization that develops cooperative plans to promote health and improve quality of life for Moore County residents. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom