Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jun 2006 Source: Merced Sun-Star (CA) Copyright: 2006 Merced Sun-Star Contact: http://www.mercedsun-star.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2546 Author: Michael Doyle, Sun-Star Washington BureaU Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH FIGHT GETS MORE FUNDING WASHINGTON -- Meth is addicting. So are congressional earmarks. Both can be unhealthy, in their own fashion. On Tuesday, a powerful House committee approved a Justice Department spending bill that includes $99 million for meth-fighting grants. In a sign that methamphetamine has captured congressional attention, the grants rise 66 percent above this year's level. "The bill includes new investments to fight the national epidemic of methamphetamine abuse," declared Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va. Wolf chairs the House panel responsible for the Justice and Commerce departments and other agencies that rely on the $59.8 billion bill approved by the House Appropriations Committee. The full House could take it up next week. But even as lawmakers boost anti-meth funding, auditors and law enforcement agents alike are questioning how well the money gets distributed. Sometimes, the pie gets divvied up more politically than fairly. In a scathing audit, the Government Accountability Office contends members of Congress have used too many "earmarks" to steer anti-meth grants to their favorite regions. Consequently, the neediest regions can get shortchanged. "It's a very competitive market, fighting for funding for your program," acknowledged Bill Ruzzamenti, director of the Fresno-based Central Valley High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program. "Often times, the key to your success is how powerful your congressman is." California has done well for itself. The state has received $78.8 million in meth grant funding since 1998, which is far more than any other state. Boosted by a united congressional delegation, which includes the chairman of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Bill Thomas, R-Bakersfield, the Central Valley HIDTA has also picked up supplemental funding in recent years. The program fights meth labs and dealers in the region from Sacramento to Kern counties. The California funding makes sense, GAO auditors and local law enforcement officials agree, because the state has long been home to a serious meth industry. "California has the worst, by far, meth problem of any state," Ruzzamenti said. "We have the whole gamut here; we don't have just the Beavis and Butthead labs." But with $214 million in meth grants doled out since 1998, and with one out of every three members of the House of Representatives now belonging to the Congressional Caucus to Fight and Control Methamphetamine, the funds flow far and wide. Earmarks, in particular, benefit some regions more than others. Through such projects as Alaska's "Bridge to Nowhere," proliferating earmarks have become infamous as a costly show of political clout. One study by the non-partisan Congressional Research Service found the number of earmarks grew from 4,126 in 1994 to 15,977 last year. "As a result of the significant use of congressional earmarks in the Meth Initiative, available funding is not always directed to the areas of the country with the greatest need," GAO auditors noted in their report issued earlier this year. Citing the "significant imbalances between the reported meth problem and the amount of money a location receives," GAO auditors concluded that earmarking "impairs the ability of the program as a whole to have a noticeable impact on meth" or other drugs. "Every once in a while, you see a million or two million dollars going to some little county you've never heard of," Ruzzamenti said. "It makes you scratch your head and wonder." Hawaii, for example, reported only 76 lab seizures between 1998 and 2004. But the state, whose senior senator, Sen. Daniel Inouye, is the highest-ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, received more meth grant funding than almost any other state. Overall, California's anti-meth spending received a generally clean bill of health from the auditors. Other states did not. The Vermont State Police, for instance, reported only one meth lab seizure between 1998 and 2004. Nonetheless, the state used $3 million in earmarked meth funds -- primarily, to target heroin dealers. In Iowa, officials used a meth grant meant for a law enforcement training center and used the money to offer general training in topics like interviewing techniques and self-defense. "However, the (Justice Department) allowed these purchases because of the grantees' earmarked status," auditors noted. "According to officials, they did not believe that they were in the position to disallow the expenditures." The Justice Department's Community Oriented Policing Services division, which oversees the grants, challenged auditors' claims that some funds were spent inappropriately. Rather, COPS officials cited the "valuable and successful projects" that have been funded. These projects include California's establishment of a Western Regional Training Center, which trains meth-fighters from 13 states. Justice Department officials, while defending the overall grant program, did agree to make some changes to comply with auditors' recommendations. It's only Congress, though, that can decide how much to keep earmarking. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman