Pubdate: Thu, 13 Apr 2006 Source: Santa Maria Times (CA) Copyright: 2006 Pulitzer Central Coast Newspapers Contact: http://www.santamariatimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/396 STRAIGHT TALK ON DRUG ABUSE Population growth has brought many changes to the Central Coast, and some of those changes are unwelcome. That is especially true with regard to substance abuse. Police in Santa Maria and Lompoc report a disturbing rise in drug-related crimes. In Santa Maria, drug arrests have more than doubled in the past five years, and more than quadrupled since 1995. Police made 991 narcotics busts in 2001, and 1,960 last year. Although Lompoc's arrest numbers have remained more constant, police say the majority of the city's crime is connected to drug and alcohol abuse. Why such a dramatic increase? There are two main answers to that question, one good and one bad. The good answer is that police are now far better trained in techniques to detect substance-abuse problems, and to thus make the arrest. The not-so-good answer is that the use of methamphetamine has skyrocketed in recent years, and it is now the drug of choice for a wide range of people. In Lompoc, the death of infant twins who were suffocated when their father rolled atop them in January after a meth binge, brought the consequences of drug abuse clearly into focus. Police say about 80 percent of all drug arrests involve the use, transportation, sale or manufacture of meth. Meth arrests far outnumber those for marijuana, heroin and cocaine. Meth's rise in popularity shouldn't surprise anyone. The drug is relatively easy to make - you can buy the ingredients at the corner drug store or at major chair stores - so the price is right for users, who also report that the meth "high" is strong and long-lasting. What they generally won't tell you is the extremely addictive nature of the drug, or the way its use drags a person down into a personal hell that destroys the lives of users and those around them. And therein lies at least a partial solution to the Central Coast's growing drug problem - educating potential users, which by almost any standard usually is the younger generation. If a teen can see, first-hand, the physical, mental and emotional baggage t! hat come s with an addiction, there's a good chance that kid will steer a wide, safe course around the drug. Substance abuse is a difficult subject to bring up around the dinner table or during your favorite TV shows in the evening. It makes a lot of parents and their children squirm in discomfort. But any aversion to meeting this issue head-on must be overcome. Talk to your kids about drug use. If you can, show them photos of a ravaged junkie, and explain what kind of damage occurs. If every family did that, our guess is that drug arrests would fall. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman