Source: The Kansas City Star Address: 1729 Grand Blvd. Kansas City, Mo. 64108 Contact: email: Tuesday, October 21, 1997 Section: B, Page 3 Missouri rated on drug labs State has shut down more meth operations than any other state. By Regina Akers Staff Writer Missouri ranks first in the nation for the number of methamphetamine labs it has shut down, U.S. Attorney Stephen L. Hill Jr. said Monday. Speaking at a clay County Commission meeting, Hill said the federal Drug Enforcement Administration released the ranking recently. Four years ago Missouri authorities broke up six methamphetamine labs statewide. The could be as high as 50 this year, Hill said. "It's an extraordinary public health issue," he said. "It's becoming the drug of choice" for teenagers. In recent months Hill has promoted the need for area residents to bet involved in fighting the drug. Clay County Prosecutor Michael Reardon and Sheriff Bob Boydston joined Hill in Monday's Presentation. A story told less often about methamphetamine is the environmental contamination left behind by toxic chemicals used in the drug's production, Hill said. Such chemicals include drain cleaner, battery acid, lye, lantern fuel, antifreeze, hydrochloric acid and red phosphorous. "It's a kind of environmental terrorism," Hill said, "It's the kind of stuff that makes for an EPA cleanup." Methamphetamine lab operators increasingly are fleeing to the perceived sanctity and quiet of rural areas as a cover for their labs, Hill said. "There's no place in Clay County that has suffered like Independence has," Hill said. "But it's a wakeup call. We don't want to see it get to the point that it has in other communities." Authorities estimate that Independence has as many as 1,000 methamphetamine labs, Hill said. Residents have reported declining property values because of environmental contamination and have had difficulty selling houses in some areas, Hill said.