Pubdate: Sat, 17 Jun 2006 Source: Journal Gazette, The (IN) Copyright: 2006 The Journal Gazette Contact: http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/908 Author: Sylvia A. Smith, Washington editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SOUDER CHIDES BUSH RESPONSE TO METH Says Lack Of Enthusiasm Rankles Congress President Bush risks losing congressional support for some aspects of his anti-drug program because the White House downplays the seriousness of the meth epidemic, Rep. Mark Souder, R-3rd, said Friday. He said members of Congress " Republicans and Democrats alike" are frustrated at the administration's proposal to kill the program that underwrites local drug task forces and efforts to reduce money for areas that have special drug problems. All the newest High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas are trying to cope with meth, Souder told members of the Bush administration at a hearing he conducted. Members of Congress are so dismayed by the White House's lack of enthusiasm for fighting meth that no one was willing to go to bat for money for the anti-drug advertising campaign, he said. Last year, House members won an additional $30 million for the program, provided the money was used for ads denouncing meth, Souder said, but that didn't happen. So this year, when a House committee cut $20 million from the administration's $120 million request for the ad campaign, not a single member of Congress was willing to plead the administration's case, Souder said. "There has to be more responsiveness," he said. Souder's complaints were echoed by representatives of anti-drug witnesses who said the Bush administration's plan to reduce meth use is weak, doesn't take into account the devastation the drug has created in some regions and ignores the experience and information of local police and anti-drug groups. The White House issued a report this month on its strategy for curbing meth and prescription drug abuse. The strategy simply repackages the administration existing budget priorities and ignores key programs that provide the majority of the community infrastructure and core support to local law enforcement, prevention and treatment efforts to deal with meth where it has emerged as a crisis," said Sue Thau, a consultant with the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America. Ron Brooks, president of the National Narcotic Officers Associations Coalition, said some government agencies " such as the Drug Enforcement Administration " and even some parts of the drug czar's office have been helpful. "The disconnect appears to be the leadership at ONDCP," he said, referring to the drug czar and his top aides at the Office of National Drug Control Policy. The report issued by the drug czar's office pledges to reduce methamphetamine and recreational prescription drug use by 15 percent by 2009 and to increase seizures of meth labs in the United States by 25 percent. But how can that be done, Souder asked, when the administration wants to kill a program that provides grant money to police departments to fight drugs? "The strategy fails to explain how the state and local authorities can be expected to keep up this pace of lab seizures if the administration succeeds in gutting the very programs that make it possible," he said. Souder also said it is "almost shocking" that the plan proposes to "strengthen border protection" as a way to reduce the importation of meth or meth ingredients but does not mention the federal department in charge of border security, the Department of Homeland Security. Souder also scolded the Bush administration for having tried to scuttle legislation to put restrictions on the drugstore sales of cold medicines, which contain an ingredient used to make meth, and the importation of those ingredients. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin