News (Media Awareness Project) - Wire: Mayors Eye More Control in Drug War |
Title: | Wire: Mayors Eye More Control in Drug War |
Published On: | 1997-09-22 |
Source: | Associated Press |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 22:15:04 |
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) A panel of the nation's mayors called on the
federal government to give local authorities a bigger role in the war on
drugs.
The 42 mayors who attended a U.S. Conference of Mayors leadership meeting
over the weekend agreed to form a coalition with police chiefs,
prosecutors, governors and others to work with Congress on a plan to
control drugs.
Fort Wayne Mayor Paul Helmke, the conference's president, said the mayors
also endorsed a plan to evaluate federal antidrug spending and share
information on the most effective local antidrug measures.
``The federal government can learn a lot from the local level,'' Denver
Mayor Wellington E. Webb said Saturday. ``We're the practitioners.''
The overall goal is to redirect federal dollars to municipalities, which
handle most of the nation's drug prosecutions, Helmke said.
Of the $16 billion that federal agencies spend annually fighting crime and
drugs, only about $4 billion of that filters down to the local agencies, he
said.
federal government to give local authorities a bigger role in the war on
drugs.
The 42 mayors who attended a U.S. Conference of Mayors leadership meeting
over the weekend agreed to form a coalition with police chiefs,
prosecutors, governors and others to work with Congress on a plan to
control drugs.
Fort Wayne Mayor Paul Helmke, the conference's president, said the mayors
also endorsed a plan to evaluate federal antidrug spending and share
information on the most effective local antidrug measures.
``The federal government can learn a lot from the local level,'' Denver
Mayor Wellington E. Webb said Saturday. ``We're the practitioners.''
The overall goal is to redirect federal dollars to municipalities, which
handle most of the nation's drug prosecutions, Helmke said.
Of the $16 billion that federal agencies spend annually fighting crime and
drugs, only about $4 billion of that filters down to the local agencies, he
said.
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