Pubdate: Wed, 08 Dec 1999 Source: Boulder Daily Camera (CO) Copyright: 1999 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.bouldernews.com/ Author: Jason Gerwitz, Camera Staff Writer DRUG TASK FORCE CAN APPLY FOR GRANT County Commissioners Approve Grant; Danish Objects To 'War On Drugs' The Boulder County Drug Task Force got the OK on Tuesday to apply for a federal grant to continue its crackdown on drugs next year, but one commissioner again objected to the agency's work. "I'm no longer voting for the War on Drugs," Commissioner Paul Danish said. The county's drug task force was formed in 1998 to attack street-level dealing and the distribution and manufacture of illicit drugs. Participating in the task force are several law enforcement agencies, including the Boulder County Sheriff's Department, District Attorney's Office, and police departments in Boulder, Louisville, Lafayette, Broomfield, Erie and the University of Colorado. On Tuesday, sheriff's Lt. Jim Smith, the task force commander, asked the commissioners for permission to apply for a $311,912 grant from the Division of Criminal Justice. The grant, which the group has received in the past, represents about 30 percent of the agency's total funding. The task force gets the rest of its funding from participating agencies. The county commissioners approved the grant application 2-1 with Danish objecting. Danish, who supports the legalization of marijuana, said he believes the task force's work infringes on civil liberties and the money could be better spent elsewhere. "Is Boulder County safer because $311,000 will be spent chasing pot smokers?" he said. "Or would it be safer if $311,000 were spent fighting burglaries?" Danish said the United States has spent more than $100 billion on the drug war but that drug use nationwide has continued to increase. Smith said the agency does not target a particular kind of drug, but he noted that marijuana and powder cocaine surface more than other drugs in the arrest totals. He said he wasn't surprised by the comments from Danish, who opposed the formation of the task force. "I know his stance on that fairly well," Smith said. Commissioner Jana Mendez said she supports the task force because it aims to stem illegal activities. She said she didn't share Danish's objections. "It's his fight, not mine," Mendez said. In the first full year of its operation, the task force made 190 arrests and had 450 open investigations. In the first quarter of the second year -- the most recent statistics --there were 41 arrests. "We're on track with what we did last year," Smith said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk