Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jul 2010 Source: Visalia Times-Delta, The (CA) Copyright: 2010 The Visalia Times-Delta Contact: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2759 Author: David Castellon TOUGHER DRUG LAWS CONSIDERED Tulare County Board of Supervisors Asked to Back Rep. Nunes' Bill Affecting Federal Land Tulare County supervisors may vote Tuesday to support a bill by Rep. Devin Nunes that would toughen penalties for drug offenses on federal land and require a national strategy to fight drug activity on those lands. "The Tulare County Sheriff's Department expends more than $450,000 each year on illegal drug eradication efforts on federal land. This legislation ... could reduce the need for law enforcement activity on federal land," states a report to the supervisors summarizing the possible benefits of the bill for the county. House Resolution 5645, the Federal Lands Counterdrug Strategy and Enforcement Enhancement Act, was introduced June 30 by Nunes, D-Visalia. "Eighty-three percent of all plants eradicated from U.S. forests between 2004 and 2008 were removed from national forests in California. Sadly, Tulare County recorded three consecutive seasons in which the number of marijuana plants seized exceeded $1 billion," Nunes wrote earlier this month in his online blog. On Friday, county narcotics deputies helped the Forest Service confiscate about 20,000 plants from an illegal grow operation in an undisclosed northeast Tulare County location. Last year, the department helped eradicate more than 221,500 marijuana plants. "This year in Tulare County, we've confiscated upwards of 200,000," each with an estimated street value of about $4,000," said Lt. Marsh Carter, head of the Sheriff's Department's narcotics unit. About 80 percent of those plants were found in Sequoia National Forest, while the rest were largely in Sequoia National Park, Bureau of Land Management and private land in the Sierra foothills, Carter said. And the number of seized marijuana plants will likely get considerably higher, he added, because new varieties of marijuana combined with mild weather earlier this year could push the end of the illegal growers' harvest season beyond the usual September period to October or November. Carter said authorities occasionally also uncover methamphetamine labs in the local foothills, and other law enforcement agencies in California have found meth and PCP labs on remote public lands. "I find this situation utterly unacceptable. We cannot meaningfully address drug trafficking on public lands without a comprehensive strategy," Nunes wrote. If the bill becomes law, it would require the director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy to develop a "Federal Lands Counterdrug Strategy" -- to be updated every two years -- that would include: # Setting a government strategy for preventing the production and trafficking of illegal drugs on federal lands. That would have to include a focus on fighting marijuana cultivation on those lands. # Specify the roles and responsibilities of agencies involved in drug enforcement on the lands, including the National Drug Control Program agencies, U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management. # Identify the resources needed by those agencies to implement the strategy. # Examine how technology can be used to fight illegal drug operations, including the use of herbicides on marijuana growing. Nunes' bill also calls for enhancing penalties for some drug offenses on federal lands that include: # Increasing from five to 10 years the maximum prison term for anyone convicted of cultivating a controlled substance on federal land. # Possession of a gun in connection with a drug offense on federal land would be an "aggravating factor" meriting an enhanced sentence, the length of which isn't specified in the bill. Andrew House, Nunes' chief of staff, said a national strategy to fight drug activity on federal land has been needed for years. Carter said he hadn't read the legislation, but said: "We support any and all efforts that involve enhancing sentencing and sentencing-related guidelines" for drug activities on federal land. "This legislation, through its study and increased penalties, could reduce the need for law enforcement activity on federal land," the staff report to the supervisors states. But even if the bill gets support in Congress, it's not likely to be voted on this year considering all the legislation that members still need to address this year, House said. "The intention in this bill is to build an awareness for it, build support for it" this year and build a contingent of Congress members to back it, House said, adding that next year, Nunes would work to get it reviewed and put up for a vote. Also on the agenda In other matters Tuesday, supervisors are expected to hold a public hearing on the county's uses of Community Development Block grants. The California Department of Housing and Community Development requires the annual public hearings to review the performance reports. The more than $2.8 million in grants being reviews include: # $546,250 to improve Tooleville Water Systems, fund lateral water connections for 155 homes served by the Plainview Mutual Water Co. and drill a test well in Richgrove. # $35,000 to conduct a housing conditions survey for all of unincorporated Tulare County. They're also expected to approve an agreement with the state Department of Food and Agriculture to reimburse the county Agricultural Commissioner's Office $154,217 for work to trap and identify insects that could be harmful to agriculture operations. About $26,000 of the county's costs would not be covered. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt