Pubdate: Sun, 06 Aug 2006 Source: Ruidoso News (NM) Copyright: 2006 Ruidoso News. Contact: http://www.ruidosonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3000 Author: Deanna Cheney Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) 'THE SCOURGE OF SOCIETY' Meth Awareness Tour A Reminder Of The Drug's Addictive Pull If we turn our heads and fail to face the problem of methamphetamines the problem may not be solvable in 10 years, U. S. Rep. Steve Pearce (R-NM) said Wednesday. "Meth is a scourge on our society. It is not only very addictive but very violent." Pearce was in town on the third day of a 17-stop tour across the 2nd Congressional District intended to raise awareness of the problem of methamphetamine use and to elicit ideas and strategies for combating what many believe is an epidemic. Pearce told audiences convened in Mescalero and in Ruidoso that "We cannot arrest our way out of this problem nor restrict our way out. Nor can we spend our way. The solution has to be raised locally; from families and communities." Pearce said he and his staff have dedicated the month of August to drug awareness. Following the meth tour, his office will look at legislation that can offer support to local law enforcement agencies, schools and health care providers. But, he urged, "I'm here to tell you, no one from Washington is coming to help you. We can send money and make laws but that is all we can do. We have to put an end to the desire and the demand for meth where it begins." Pearce, who had been in Anthony on Monday, said he learned there that veteran inmates in the La Tuna Prison trade commissary privileges for urine from new inmates who were meth users. "They drink the urine to get high," he told audiences. "Now, if I think about my son or daughter doing such a thing, it would hit home. This is an example of just how powerful the pull of this drug is and what people will do to get it." The popularity of Methamphetamine among drug users has sky-rocketed in the past 30 years with the growth in lab operations here and in Mexico. Authorities say that meth trafficked across the border can be addictive after just one use as the grade made in super labs in Mexico is higher than that made in domestic labs. Within 30 days users can lose their teeth, 30 percent of their body weight, and are susceptible to brain damage, heart failure and stroke. At the same time, user behaviors become increasingly erratic due to the damage of neurons that contain Dopamine and Serotonin. Greg Cordova, fire chief in Mescalero, said that he has seen first hand violence and delusion among meth users. "I've seen a three-year old boy hanging in his own home by his father who was strung out on meth. I've seen a man on meth with a broken arm keep coming after officers and not feel the pain. I've seen a lot of ugly things and it breaks my heart," he said. Dr. Charles Harrison, newly appointed superintendent of Mescalero Apache Schools, told Rep. Pearce he is "deeply concerned" about the threat of methamphetamines on today's youth. "I began my career in education in the '70s and in our drug training we focused on three things: Prevention, intervention and rehabilitation. As the school years have gone by prevention education for our youth has gone down the line from 9th grade to 7th grade and now we, in some places, are doing it in Kindergarten. I'd say that is a sad statement." Dr. Paul Wirth, superintendent of Ruidoso Schools, said he advocates for an age-appropriate but pro-active, "scared-straight philosophy" in all schools in the country. Wirth described a presentation put on by State Police officials at Ruidoso High in recent years in which a graphic video shown was highly effective. "Frankly, we scared the heck out of our kids and staff. We told them the scary truth about meth, we gave them the facts. I would encourage other school districts to do the same," he said. Pearce said he is hearing alarming statistics from school administrators in his district. When in Carlsbad July 31, he learned that methamphetamine afflicts 11 percent of Carlsbad's high school population - nearly four times the national average of three percent. Pearce said his concern extends to children who do not choose to do meth, in its varied forms, but who are otherwise affected. "When meth is cooked in a home lab it stays in the sheet rock and furnishings and eventually affects the health of the children," he said. "It can be toxic." Responding to inquiries about early testing, Pearce said he would study mandated testing of newborns in hospitals and expanded testing of teens in school but said that until such a mandate comes from the federal government, if it comes, each hospital and school district can make routine testing a part of their in house policies. Pearce talked about new laser technology currently being used by the federal government that might be applicable to communities. "What it is, is a series of lasers set up that can sense drugs like meth. That information is picked up by UAVs that fly over the area and reads the chemical imprints. AdvertisementWe are trying this on the border now but sometimes when we talk about bringing such technology into our neighborhoods you begin to see controversy," he said. Judy Miller, a Ruidoso Downs City Councilor, said meth dealers should be charged the same as murderers. "If you start meth it is likely going to be what kills you," she said. "Using it is a terminal illness and the dealers know that." Speaking as one, members of the 12th Judicial District Probation and Parole Office, said they are seeing an increase of meth among probationers during drug tests and asked why probationers who test positive for meth use can't be charged with "possession of methamphetamines." Calls for tougher sentencing was heard from forum participants in both Mescalero and Ruidoso but court and law enforcement agents said their department's are already overwhelmed. Frank Hooper, director of the new Lincoln County Narcotics Enforcement Agency, said the public's help in fighting meth production, sale and use is paramount. "At one time I had six narcotics officers now there are only two of us," he said. "I get about 10 calls a week from people reporting unusual traffic at a house they're watching but most of my time is spent in the office dealing with paperwork and getting a search warrant requires more than what a caller can provide." Hooper said individuals who are inclined to monitor their neighborhoods can help by documenting the time when activity was observed; collecting descriptions on persons going in and out of the residence, the license plate numbers on cars seen, and even video-taping activity, when possible. "Without more resources it is an uphill battle for us," he said. "This [methamphetamine epidemic] does not look like a battle we are going to win unless there is cooperation by everyone." Across the board agency representatives present at the meth talks said that they are understaffed and under funded but all agreed that circumventing use through education was the key. To begin changing things, access to rehabilitation and counseling services must be made possible, they said. "I can sit here and say that we need more money for prosecutors and law enforcement but when I look outside myself, I understand the most important thing is education and intervention," David Ceballes, deputy district attorney, said. Pearce said that what was revealed in Mescalero was that smaller, tighter communities face challenges different from larger communities, including a heightened fear of reprisal from methamphetamine dealers. Testimony was heard about families who have faced drive-by shootings when parents complained that their children were being lured into meth use. Doralynn Simmons told Rep. Pearce that dealers seem to target reservations for staging distribution of drugs because "they feel more safeguarded." "They have an understanding of how our laws work and protect them on the reservation," she said. Mark Chino, president of the Mescalero Apache Tribe, said he would talk to the tribe's local telephone co-op to see if a hotline can be set up where activity can be reported anonymously. Meanwhile, Debbie Toclan-ny, coordinator of the Mescalero Drug Court Program, said she would help organize a community helpline for users and would like to be a part of a Neighborhood Watch program on the reservation. Pearce said the atmosphere he encountered in Mescalero "demonstrated precisely what he was hoping to accomplish" through his methamphetamine awareness tour. "This forum for discussion galvanized a community eager to fight the methamphetamine crisis," he said Wednesday. Pearce added that he has benefited from talks with residents and leaders in all the communities he has visited and said he would be back to help them "win this battle for the lives of our children." Pearce said he plans to return to the area in October to help arm schools with training programs for staff and education for youth. A copy of all ideas expressed in Pearce's two week tour of communities is to be distributed from which "communities can draw from one another for solutions," as well. Fast fact: Methampheta-mine cases handled by narcotics teams in New Mexico grew from 267 in 2002 to 325 in 2003, according to the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department. In the same years, meth labs seized by the DEA grew steadily from 46 in 1999 to 190 in 2003 to 120 in 2004. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman