Pubdate: Sat, 04 Nov 2006 Source: Lancaster Eagle-Gazette (OH) Copyright: 2006 Lancaster Eagle-Gazette Contact: http://www.lancastereaglegazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3143 Author: Carl Burnett Jr. SHERIFF'S OFFICE USES BILLBOARDS TO WARN DRUG DEALERS LANCASTER - Drug dealers need to avoid Fairfield County, or they will be caught. That was the message Fairfield County Sheriff Dave Phalen wants to get across with new billboards around the county, which he announced during a news conference Friday. "We are going to come early and stay late to keep drug dealers out of our neighborhoods, schools and communities," Phalen said. Phalen said during the recent Halloween weekend celebration in Athens, deputies and State Highway Patrol troopers from both Fairfield and Hocking counties patrolled the U.S. 33 corridor from Columbus to Athens. "We arrested 40 people," Phalen said. "Most were for alcohol and drugs that seemed to be for personal consumption. We also confiscated one handgun." Orman Hall, executive director of the Fairfield County Alcohol Drug and Mental Health Board, said his agency has noticed a decrease in overall drug use in the county. "But we have seen very disturbing evidence that drugs are easily available," Hall said. In a recent teen survey, more than 13 percent of the Fairfield County teens surveyed said it's very easy to obtain cocaine, and 47.9 percent said they easily could obtain marijuana. "That easy availability worries me," Hall said. Phalen said the Sheriff's Office intends to use K-9 units to search school parking lots and schools to find drug dealers. "We are working closely with the schools," Phalen said. Paul Mathews, superintendent of Liberty Union Local Schools, supports law enforcement's efforts to keep drug dealers away from schools. "The Sheriff's Office has an open invitation to come in our schools and parking lots anytime," Mathews said. Phalen said five billboards featuring Deputy John Williamson and K-9 Deputy Arno are going up around the county at a cost of $1,766. It's a warning to those entering the county. Phalen said the county remains a safe community. "I don't want people to think we have this massive drug problem because we don't," Phalen said. "We just need to be proactive. We hope to get the drug dealers' attention by the billboards." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman