Pubdate: Sun, 20 Jul 2008 Source: Akron Beacon Journal (OH) Copyright: 2008 The Beacon Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/6 Author: Rick Armon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) COUNTY MAY TRACK METH LABS Task Force Recommends Creating Web Site To Identify Houses And Cleanup Efforts Summit County should create a Web site identifying all properties that have been tainted by methamphetamines, a county task force recommends. The site would provide a much-needed resource for home buyers and renters when they are deciding where to live, members said. The Summit County Methamphetamine Property Awareness Task Force - a mix of health agencies, county leaders and law enforcement - wrapped up several months of discussions last week about how to better inform residents about properties damaged by meth. The group concluded that all law-enforcement agencies should notify the sheriff's office about meth-tainted properties and the county should develop a dedicated, public Web site identifying the known sites. The Web site would provide public access to all documents concerning the property, including any citing cleanup efforts. The task force also urged federal and state officials to establish cleanup guidelines. The recommendations now go to County Council for approval. Councilman Jon Poda, who led the task force, said he will ask council to give its approval at its Aug. 4 meeting. The task force was created this year after news stories about a woman who bought a home in Stow, unaware that the property had been used as a meth lab. She sued the seller. Since then, Stow and Green have enacted laws making it a crime not to disclose a property's meth history. Cuyahoga Falls also is debating legislation. Not everyone will disclose the history and that's why the Web site would be a valuable tool, Poda said. ''We are trying to be proactive,'' he said. The county also should develop a marketing campaign to make people aware of the Web site, he said. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration maintains a similar Web site called the National Clandestine Laboratory Registry (http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/seizures/ohio.html). The site, which was last updated in September 2007, lists 137 properties in Summit County. David Suveges of Cuyahoga Falls, a landlord and vice president of the Akron/Canton Real Estate Investors Association, said he's pleased the county is trying to improve awareness. He has monitored the task force's meetings. ''It's a start,'' Suveges said. ''But I don't know that the county can find all the answers.'' Meth is a drug made by cooking ingredients, including over-the-counter medications. The process creates dangerous chemical residues that can seep into walls and carpeting. Exposure to those chemicals can cause headaches, chest pain, nausea and dizziness and other problems, depending on the length and type of the exposure, according to health experts. The Summit County Drug Unit has shut down more than 30 meth labs so far this year, said Hylton Baker, head of the group. ''We still continue to find labs and receive calls about labs on almost a daily basis,'' he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin