Pubdate: Sat, 08 Mar 2008 Source: Pantagraph, The (Bloomington, IL) Copyright: 2008 Pantagraph Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pantagraph.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/643 Author: Kartikay Mehrotra Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/byrne Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant BUDGET PLAN CUTS GRANTS TO AREA DRUG TASK FORCES SPRINGFIELD -- Every year, 20 Illinois drug task force units split about $2.8 million in federal grants to fund their fight against drug dealers and drug manufacturers statewide. In 2006, those federal funds helped the drug enforcement officers patrolling 69 of Illinois' 102 counties reduce the number of labs producing methamphetamine and increase the number of undercover marijuana and cocaine busts. Those initiatives could come to a halt for 12 of those 20 units in the next year if the Bush administration's proposed 2009 budget is approved. The plan would cut the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant's funding by 67 percent, reducing Illinois' recipients to just eight agencies splitting $900,000 "This is a president who's so focused on this war and so focused on everything else that if it's Iraq we've got the money, but if it's for the U.S. we don't," said U.S. Rep. Phil Hare, D-Moline. "I don't know why he's proposing these kinds of cuts." Local task force leaders are wondering the same thing while they figure out how to run their units with a fraction of the resources. Sgt. Mark Peyton leads the East Central Illinois Task Force in Coles, Moultrie, Shelby and Douglas counties. His agency will not only suffer operational cuts, but also will have to release a pair of experienced officers to keep costs under budget. "Our overall operating budget varies somewhere around $300,000; cutting $100,000 out of that is going to be rough," said Peyton, who worries that the hours already spent on keeping streets safe could go to waste if lawmakers don't realize the impact of the proposed budget. "I think everything that impacts us will ultimately impact the community. Those are the real losers, unfortunately." Hare has proposed legislation to add $490 million to the grant if the budget cuts are approved. Other sponsors include Republican U.S. Rep. Tim Johnson of Urbana. "We have the money; it's a matter of if we have the will," Hare said. "We're going to hope that the president doesn't veto this, but if he does, we have the votes to override him." There's no doubt that the resources are working, according to Hare and the task force leaders. From 1997 and 2004, the Byrne grant never dipped below $3.8 million in Illinois funding, and it reached as high as $6.5 million. "I don't understand what the logic is in cutting drug funding," said Master Sgt. John Biffany, leader of the Blackhawk Area Task Force, which serves counties east of the Quad Cities as far as Ogle County. "In the area that we serve there really are no other dedicated drug units." Biffany and other task force leaders predict dissolving drug task forces will have an impact on the overall statewide crime rate, not just drug use in Illinois. "The communities that we serve would deteriorate if there weren't drug enforcement," he said. "When law enforcement has a grasp on narcotics enforcement, all other crimes go down." - --- Force reduction The following drug task forces (with their service areas in parentheses) could be among those that dissolve if President Bush's budget proposal is adopted: - -- Central Illinois Enforcement Group (Mason, Logan, Sangamon, Morgan and Christian counties) - -- Task Force 6 (McLean and DeWitt counties) - -- LaSalle Task Force (LaSalle Putnam and Bureau counties) - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom