Pubdate: Sat, 24 Feb 2007 Source: Herald, The (Everett, WA) Copyright: 2007 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/190 Author: Diana Hefley WE NEED AID IN DRUG FIGHT, COUNTY LEADERS TELL CANTWELL EVERETT - There always will be some illegal drug imported from some country peddled by some dealer. And someone always will be in the business of providing consumers with illegal drugs. "We're never going to stop drugs, but what we can do is educate people so they can make informed decisions," said Pat Slack, commander of the Snohomish Regional Drug Task Force. Slack and other community leaders met with U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., on Friday at the Greater Trinity Christian Learning Center in south Everett. The meeting was one of five Cantwell convened around the state to discuss the rise in gang activity and possible ties to methamphetamine trafficking. Earlier this week, she asked the U.S. attorney general to investigate the possible connection. Local leaders spoke less about potential links and more about the need for federal partnerships to support drug prevention and rehabilitation efforts in Snohomish County. More than once, they told Cantwell that it is crucial to take a holistic approach to the community's drug problem and address the demand for drugs -not just spend money to arrest and lock up people. Police and county officials called for fixed federal funding for education and prevention programs as well as treatment and special drug courts for addicts. The funding needs to be provided in a way that doesn't pit one service agency against another, officials said. "We're in a fight. It's a constant battle every year to pay for what you're doing," said Slack, who manages 50 different funding sources to run the area's largest drug task force. Cantwell told Friday's group that she is working to toughen anti-gang laws, boost anti-meth initiatives and reverse President Bush's proposed cuts to federal funding for local law enforcement. The federal funding has been "the backbone law enforcement uses to fight" local drug crime, she said. The group, which included County Executive Aaron Reardon and Sheriff Rick Bart, thanked Cantwell for pushing through funding for police and new laws to fight drugs, especially meth. They noted that the state has seen a significant decline in the number of local meth labs. Instead, meth has turned into a big business, with greater control from organized criminal groups. Superlabs in Mexico are churning out a purer form of the drug. The majority of the meth here now is coming from the same international drug trafficking organizations that have been supplying the county with cocaine, marijuana and other illicit drugs for years, Bart said. "As we all know, drugs are the fuel that allow gangs to root in our communities and flourish," said David Dongilli with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The gangs, however, don't simply deal in one drug, police said. "Once they're rooted, look at a gang like a corner store. They don't specialize in any one thing other than criminal activity," Slack said. Snohomish County has seen a spike in robberies, assaults and homicides involving people connected to gangs, police said. It is a development being seen across the state and nation. Gangs are locating in the suburbs and rural areas, and they bring with them drugs and violent crime, said Snohomish County sheriff's detective Steve Haley. Haley has been tracking gangs for about a year. He has identified about 250 members in more than 30 known criminal street and outlaw biker gangs. Sheriff Bart said more community partnerships are needed to reach young people and encourage them to avoid drugs and gangs. "I hate to see kids go to jail. If we can get to them before that, we're doing our jobs," Bart said. Winnie Corral, program manager for the South Everett Neighborhood Center and Familias Unidas, asked for more support for community-based programs. "We're trying to stem a pipeline when another one will open," Corral said. "We need to create a community where people feel they belong and a school system where kids want to be in school. We have to pay close attention to prevention." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman