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News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: Editorial: Stopping Meth
Title:US OR: Editorial: Stopping Meth
Published On:2004-11-08
Source:Oregonian, The (Portland, OR)
Fetched On:2008-08-21 14:46:02
STOPPING METH

the White House Strategy to Fight Methamphetamine Is Promising, but It
Requires Money and Political Will

The new national report on strategies to fight synthetic drugs is 75
pages of dry reading. It's not chilling like the handwritten journal
that lays out the apparent plan to kidnap and murder Portland lawyer
Douglas A. Swanson, whose body was found tied to a tree in the Mount
Hood National Forest.

It's not captivating like the story of the "Blond Bandit," Denise Ruth
Bender, the former secretary recently sentenced to prison for holding
up eight Portland-area banks during a 25-day crime spree earlier this
year.

It's not as strange as last week's tale of an 18-year-old Portland man
rescued from a chimney, covered with soot and screaming obscenities,
after he was stuck there while trying to hide from police.

Yet the new drug strategy, the brutal murder, the "Blond Bandit" and
the paranoid man in the chimney are all fundamentally about the same
thing: methamphetamine.

Meth lies at the heart of all these stories; in fact, it is the source
or the cause of much of the crime and human misery in Oregon,
Washington and other Western states. This new report by the office of
White House drug czar John Walters and Attorney General John Ashcroft
must be required reading for federal and state policymakers.

The sweeping plan's basic strategy is to stop the meth trade by
choking off supplies of the drug's ingredients. That's the right
approach, as The Oregonian demonstrated in its recent five-part series
on meth, "Unnecessary Epidemic."

Yet the newspaper series, reported and written by Steve Suo, also made
clear that half-measures won't stop meth trafficking. As the White
House plan warns, "The regulatory system is meaningful only so far as
it is enforced."

So far it hasn't been. The United States has continually left the door
to this country open just a crack, and meth chemicals have kept
pouring in. The "history . . . is a continuing cycle of government
action and trafficker reaction," the report notes.

The failures of the war on meth are painfully obvious on the streets
of Portland and in big cities and small towns across the country. The
drug's purity -- one way to measure its availability -- has doubled
since 1999. Meth-related emergency room visits rose 69 percent from
1999 to 2002. Meth is found in the bloodstream of more than one in
five people arrested in the Portland area.

Those numbers show that what the federal government and some states,
including Oregon, are now doing to fight meth isn't nearly enough. Yet
this is not just another hopeless drug battle. The Oregonian series
and the new White House report both describe compelling evidence that
strategies to curtail the black market in meth chemicals can be effective.

Meth cannot be made without either ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, the
principal chemical ingredients in popular cold medicines such as
Sudafed. The new White House plan includes the most thorough
strategies yet to monitor and control these chemicals.

One key change would include new restrictions on legal imports of bulk
ephedrine and pseudoephedrine. Under the plan, the government would
estimate legitimate U.S. demand for cough and cold medicines made from
the chemicals, and cap imports at that level. The plan also urges much
tighter monitoring of the flow of chemicals from manufacturers in
India, China, Germany and the Czech Republic.

The plan includes a long list of other proposed actions to control
meth chemicals, including seeking greater cooperation with Mexico and
Canada. It's a promising list of goals, yet for now the broad plan to
crack down on meth is mostly just words on paper.

It will succeed only if the Bush administration, Congress and the
states now put the necessary money and political will behind this new
war on meth.
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