Pubdate: Mon, 18 Feb 2008 Source: Ottumwa Courier, The (IA) Copyright: 2008 Ottumwa Courier Contact: http://www.ottumwacourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3687 Author: Mark Newman FIGHTING FOR FUNDS Loebsack Wants To Restore Millions Cut From Drug Enforcement Budget OTTUMWA -- When he started making drug arrests 20 years ago, Ottumwa Police Lt. Tom McAndrew said a $300 meth arrest was a big deal. These days, it's hard to get overworked federal prosecutors to take a $25,000 meth bust seriously. But meth dealers are being taken off the streets. Manufacturing labs have been reduced. And imported drugs are being confiscated. Locally that's because of a sufficiently funded drug task force, McAndrew told his congressional representative Saturday. Congressman Dave Loebsack, D-Iowa, was at the Wapello County Law Center meeting with McAndrew, OPD Chief Jim Clark, Wapello County Sheriff Don Kirkendall and Chief Deputy Mark Miller. Loebsack wanted to know what the federal $660 million dollar Byrne-Justice Assistance Grant reduction was going to do to efforts to reduce drug trafficking in the area. "The cuts are going to be devastating to the Drug Task Force," McAndrew said. "It'll strangle us." Chief Clark fears it would be back to the old way of doing things. "The only drug enforcement would be if a patrol officer pulls someone over and smells some pot, and pulls a baggy of marijuana out of the car," he said. When McAndrew joined the OPD, there was one anti-drug officer. Their budget was so small, an undercover officer could barely afford to buy drugs. He remembers getting that $300 bust and they all were thrilled. A few years later, federal funding started coming in, and they could get serious, he said. They hired more plainclothes officers, paid overtime to work cases and were able to make serious buys with major drug dealers. The change was overnight, he said: They started making arrests and confiscating tens of thousands of dollars in meth. Last month in Washington, a worried Congressman Loebsack authored legislation to provide emergency money to restore funding back to the $660 million that had been voted on, up from the $170 million that ended up being signed into law at the end of 2007. In his travels around the state, Iowa's Drug Czar, Dale Woolery, heard concern over lack of money for drug enforcement from local peace officers.. He told Clark, Kirkendall and the others his office is trying to make some money available to keep drug enforcement efforts going. "There is grant money from the state but it's a stopgap measure," he said. "We don't know what's going to happen in [Washington, D.C.] or [Des Moines]. I wish we knew more." In the meantime, he said, his office is preparing as if the cuts were really going through. He urged local law enforcement to start sending their grant applications in soon. Upon hearing this, Clark asked Loebsack what kind of support the Byrne-Jag Funding Restoration Act had. Loebsack said he couldn't predict what would happen with his fight against the cut. "Right now, the 67 percent funding cut is in place," Loebsack said. But he did say he was seeing support from both sides of the aisle when it came to getting that money put back in the budget. "There's been a lot of bipartisan support, I want to make that clear. We're trying to get as much of that 490 million [dollars] back in. There is bipartisan support for fighting drugs and fighting the bad guys who make the drugs and sell the drugs," Loebsack said. "It's not a partisan fight. We've got to put aside that bickering." There is money in government, Clark claimed. He said he's seen plenty of wasted funding spent on whatever the political "issue of the day" happened to be. At one point, a government grant for national security paid for a portable GPS, a Global Positioning System to help the Eddyville Police Department navigate its way around town. Eddyville, poppulation 1,064, is about 1.2 square miles. While Clark said he supports a strong effort in national security, there's probably a better use for some of that cash. "They need to be allocating these funds for... purposes like drug enforcement," Clark said. That's because a great national security protecting us from outsiders isn't going to do much good if a country loaded with drug addicts is tearing itself apart within its own borders. The drug task force has helped make that happen, said Lt. McAndrew, the unit commander. Up to 90 percent of the meth in Ottumwa comes from outside the state, much of it from drug dealers with connections in Mexico, the investigators believe. "More secure borders will make things more secure here," Miller said. It's not the mother carrying her baby across the scorching desert that's been the problem, either. There are drug dealers with Mexican connections who seem to know what they are doing. "When we ask how they got here, they laugh and say they just drove, or walked across a bridge," said McAndrew. "We're trying to fight a national problem at a local level." It could get worse, Loebsack said: Instead of every state getting some funding as is done now, in 2009, the president wants to make the Byrne-Jag funding for drug enforcement an "open grant application" program. In that case, Loebsack said, the priority would probably be sending money to large populations areas, especially those with high violent crime rates. "So the money would end up going to the same places that always get the money," Clark said. "It's very frustrating." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek