Pubdate: Sat, 26 Jan 2008 Source: Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier, The (IA) Copyright: 2008 The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier Contact: http://www.wcfcourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3510 Author: Jeff Reinitz, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/byrne+program DRUG ENFORCEMENT GRANT THREATENED WATERLOO --- Local police say the federal government has continued to shrink funding that's the backbone for drug trafficking battles. Now the president has included even more cuts for the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant Program in his recent budget, said Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. The Senate approved $660 million for the program but was forced to reduce the funding due to the threat of a presidential veto, Harkin said Friday during a conference in Waterloo with law enforcement representatives. Current proposals place the Byrne program at only $170 million. This means Iowa agencies, which currently get $4.2 million, would only see $1.5 million. "After years and years of cuts to these programs, we can no longer ask our frontline officers to do more with less. We cannot continue to starve these drug enforcement task forces from the resources they need to fight crime on our neighborhood streets," Harkin said. Harkin and Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., intend to restore all $660 million for the program by adding language to an emergency funding bill that Congress likely will consider next month. Locally, the Byrne grant pays for 75 percent of the salaries for the five officers and deputies assigned to the Tri-County Drug Enforcement Task Force and for a drug prosecutor. Without the grant, the local governments would have to pick up the entire cost. Last year, the task force received $283,000 in Byrne funding, said Waterloo Police Chief Tom Jennings. He said the grant normally provides a little more than a quarter of a million dollars a year. But Jennings said it hasn't kept up with cost-of-living and insurance increases for the officers. In the past, the grant used to fund both salary and other costs, like equipment, training and "buy money" used in undercover investigations. "It's been on kind of a roller coaster ride. In the past, it's paid for not only the salaries but operation money and overtime. And over the years, they've cut it back and cut it back, so now it's just paying salaries," Jennings said. Other agencies aren't as lucky. "We're fortunate with the Tri-County Task Force that we're still getting funds, but other communities across the state have lost complete funding. The formula and the need, I think, are why we're still in the game," Jennings said. Harkin said canceling the current Byrne program would eliminate funding for 15 Iowa drug control programs and salaries for 39 people in those programs. The task force's involvement with the Byrne grant started in 1991 as a four-year project with the community picking up the tab for the fifth year. But the program proved successful and has continued. Last year, Tri-County officers seized drugs with a total street value of $1.675 million, which was a record for the agency. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin