Pubdate: Tue, 24 Mar 1998 Source: UPI DRUG LAB BILL DIES IN COMMITTEE SACRAMENTO, March 24 (UPI) _ A proposed extra sentence for people operating illegal drug labs in residential areas has failed in the state Senate's Public Safety Committee. The bill by Sen. Hilda Solis, D-El Monte, fell one vote short today of clearing the panel, but the author received permission to try again later. Senate leader John Burton, D-San Francisco, said increasing sentences makes little impact on methamphetamine-makers who get a 10-fold return on their investment in chemicals and equipment. Others suggested that reducing the demand for drugs makes more sense than putting offenders in prison for longer terms, only to have newcomers take their places in drug labs. But law enforcement officers said the bill would break a pattern of methamphetamine labs moving from rural to urban areas, where their telltale odors can be masked more easily and manufacturers are closer to dealers. The bill would have added a five-year penalty for those who manufacture methamphetamine or who store chemicals used in the process within 1,000 feet of a residence. The panel approved a companion bill aimed at restricting chemicals used to produce methamphetamine. It would limit the sale and purchase of the precursor chemicals of iodine and red phosphorous, with exceptions for legitimate businesses.