Pubdate: Sun, 30 Dec 2007 Source: Herald Journal, The (UT) Copyright: 2007 The Herald Journal Contact: http://www.hjnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2485 Author: Aaron Falk Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH ADDICTION PERSISTS IN VALLEY Long considered a social scourge, Utah's methamphetamine labs have seemingly disappeared. The state shuttered 121 labs in 2002, according to statistics from the Drug Enforcement Administration. Three years later, that number was down to 50. Then 15. And then there were none. The Cache/Rich Drug Task Force hasn't shut down a meth lab in more than two years, Logan Police Det. Rob Italasano said. But for all the talk of disappearing meth labs, Roland Parent, a substance abuse counselor at the Bear River Health Department, has not noticed the difference. "There has been no change in the trend," he said. "In the last four years, the number of clients that we serve has gone up 100 fold." If the labs have all closed, the sunken eyes of meth addiction have not. Logan Police Sgt. Alan Hodges, the man in charge of the Cache/Rich Drug Task Force, said eliminating local labs is but one step in what he believes is a never-ending battle against the drug. Still, it is a step he will take. There are a number of factors involved in the decline. Hodges pointed to a federal crackdown on methamphetamine precursors. The Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005 made it more difficult to buy products containing pseudoephedrine, ephedrine and phenylpropanolamine, which are commonly found in cold medicine. The risks - both legal and "the very real possibility of being blown up" - along with the cost of making meth became too high, Italasano said. Instead, meth production has been outsourced to Mexico, where looser laws have allowed for "super labs" to make hundreds of pounds of the drug, where home meth labs might have made an ounce, Hodges said. "If there's a demand, people are going to find a way to make it," he said. Officials at the Bear River Health Department can attest to that. Last year the department, which offers an intensive outpatient program, treated more than 1,700 people with meth addictions, Parent said. Randy Wilde, an environmental health scientist for the BRHD, said nearly 30 properties in Cache Valley had to be vacated in 2006-07 because of meth contamination. Both police and health officials have theories on how to slow meth use in the United States. Hodges said restrictions on precursors, similar to those in place in the U.S., would slow production. Parent said officials need to do a better job securing the border. Parent also blames meth's surge, in part, on a failure to educate. "We had cocaine in the '80s and we hammered that in the ground pretty good," he said. "But we got lax and turned our backs, and meth took its place." If the addiction is to be curbed, he said, it will take an aggressive approach. So far, so good, Parent said. Logan Police announced earlier this month that the department planned to ditch the popular D.A.R.E. program in schools after nearly 20 years. In its place, the department will use the Nurturing, Opportunities, Values and Accountability program - a modernized curriculum, which officers believe does a better job preparing children. On a state level, officials launched a $2 million media blitz, "End Meth Now," earlier this year. The campaign consists of a series of TV commercials, print ads and radio spots. "The first step to overcoming this devastating drug is for citizens to become aware of the increasing toll methamphetamine is taking on life in Utah," Gov. Jon M. Huntsman said in a prepared statement when the campaign launched in September. "Meth use harms all Utah citizens regardless of whether they have fallen prey to addiction or if they fall within the circle of influence of someone who is using." Parent said he believes in the in-your-face campaign. "They send a very clear message," he said. "Anything we can do to help, we have to take that avenue." The advertisements suggest anyone can be an addict. Your mother. Your daughter. Your sister. Indeed, the drug once thought of as the scourge of the lower class, has broken down socioeconomic boundaries. "It's across the board," Parent said. "It doesn't respect rich or poor." And the number of female users has skyrocketed in recent years, he said. Of all meth arrests in the state last year, 65 percent were women, Parent said. Women are enticed by the drug, he said, because of what it offers on paper: increased energy and a decreased appetite. But the long-term effects of meth use are well-documented and devastating. Meth users reported "runs" of staying awake for more than a week at a time. They become mentally incapacitated. That's when paranoia sets in and addicts commit crimes they often don't even remember, Parent said. Logan Police have linked meth to more than 90 percent of violent crimes. "The cost they pay is just not worth it," Parent said. "You have people who come from good families and they ruin their lives. It's such a violent drug. You have mothers who choose meth over their children." Still, Parent believes the fight against meth is one that can be won. "It's one at a time. If we can make a difference in one person's life," he said. "For us to say that we can't win, I don't believe that." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake