Pubdate: Wed, 15 Mar 2006 Source: Oroville Mercury-Register (CA) Copyright: 2006 Oroville Mercury Register Contact: http://www.orovillemr.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2277 Note: note: email not listed on site, from other listings Author: Roger H. Aylworth Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SUPERVISORS GET SNAPSHOT OF FIGHT AGAINST METH Butte County has the uncomfortable distinction of being at the front line in a battle with a modern scourge, and Tuesday the Board of Supervisors got a snapshot look at how the fight is going. During the regular board meeting, Butte County Sheriff Perry Reniff, along with Keith Krampitz, commander of the south county narcotics task force, reported on the activity of the "Methamphetamine Strike Force." The strike force is an unusual coalition of law enforcement, education, public health agencies, and public and private social services agencies, joining forces to "eliminate methamphetamine here in Butte County," said Reniff. Reniff said it is difficult to quantify the total impact of meth on the county, but some numbers are easy. According to his figures, in 2004, 27 percent of the bookings in Butte County Jail were "for production, possession or (being) under the influence of methamphetamine." Also during that same year, 14 deaths were directly attributable to meth consumption, but Reniff said that tells very little of the story. "What this does not show, and what any street officer in the county will tell you, we suspect that approximately 80 percent of the crime in Butte County is directly related to methamphetamine. "What it also doesn't talk about is the effects that it has on the behavioral health, on public health, on our schools, on every segment of our society," said Reniff. For many years the county has been aggressive in its law enforcement effort to attack meth. In 2004, 39 labs were seized, nine dumps of lab-related toxic waste were located and 5,500 grams of the drug were confiscated. Krampitz said that in 2005, Butte County ranked fourth in the state for labs seized on a per-capita basis, and sixth in the state in total number of labs seized. On top of that, 331 children were "rescued," according to Reniff. He said the "drug endangered children" program was initiated in Butte County and has since gone nationwide. It takes kids out of homes where meth is produced or possessed. The sheriff said meth cookers live in conditions so fetid and vile that they are beyond the imagination of most people. When law enforcement officers locate a lab, they wear a breathing apparatus to avoid the toxic fumes when they dismantle the equipment and remove the material. Yet the people doing the cooking, and all too often their children, live in this environment. "Most of us wouldn't have our animals living the way these children are living. They are definitely innocent victims," he said. Reniff and Krampitz said the battle against the drug will be somewhat eased due to the passage of federal legislation authored by Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., that, among other things, requires that cold medicines containing ephedrine or psuedoephedrine be kept behind a counter. These two chemicals are "precursors" from which meth is made. However, enforcement isn't the only tool of the task force. "It is every bit as important to prevent methamphetamine use as it is to enforce it. It is also every bit as important to come up with ways of treatment as it is to enforce it. We talk about prevention. We talk about treatment. We talk about enforcement," he explained. Education is a tool the strike force is using in prevention. Like last year, the task force is mounting a public relations campaign this spring to encourage teens to stay away from the drug. In December, 300 physicians, social workers and other people involved in treating meth users met in the South Oroville Community Center for a day-long seminar on treatment, according to Reniff. This June, another such treatment symposium is scheduled in Chico. The strike force also has a Web site at www.2stopmeth.org that provides a host of information about the drug and its dangers. Reniff told the board trying to stop meth in Butte County won't be easy. "That's a real lofty goal. We know it is going to take a long time to reach anywhere near that goal," continued the sheriff. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom