Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Editorial: In the War on Drugs, One Victory
Title:US: Editorial: In the War on Drugs, One Victory
Published On:2007-07-06
Source:Christian Science Monitor (US)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 02:52:20
IN THE WAR ON DRUGS, ONE VICTORY

Action by states and the Congress has resulted in a sharp decrease in
the number of US meth labs.

Virginia's attorney general calls methamphetamine "probably the
ugliest drug...in 40 years." Many other law-enforcement officials
agree. So it's heartening that state and federal effort targeting
these illegal uglies is hitting a bull's eye - at least in reducing
the US supply of "meth."

Since the early 1990s, a meth resurgence has spawned thousands of
hidden labs in motel rooms, barns, and homes in rural and suburban
America. But the number of these meth kitchens is radically
declining, thanks to stepped-up law enforcement and laws that
restrict the supply of a key ingredient.

Meth is known to be quickly addictive, with severe health
repercussions. But it also has a social ripple effect. Children of
users may be abused as the user turns violent, or neglected for days
during the user's crash period. Kids and neighbors are also
endangered by the potentially explosive manufacturing process, which
produces five pounds of toxic waste for every pound of meth.

As the meth outbreak gathered steam, though, so did many states,
followed by the US Congress. Awareness, training, and shared
databases helped local and federal law enforcement, and many states
passed laws restricting the supply of the key meth ingredient
pseudoephedrine, found in cold medicines. Last year, Congress brought
uniformity to those laws by requiring pharmacies to move the
medicines behind the counter and limit the amount customers can buy
in a day. Customers must also show an ID.

The results are striking. According to the federal Drug Enforcement
Agency (DEA), the number of lab sites seized in the US has dropped by
58 percent since the peak in 2003 - to 7,347 last year. This is an
instance in which laws worked.

Would that this were the end of America's meth challenge, though.

The vacuum left by the steep decline in the home-cooked stuff is
being filled by meth smuggled in from well-supplied labs in Mexico,
which account for about 80 percent of the US market. Success with the
US labs hints that in the drug fight, it is perhaps easier to go
after the small fry than the big fish. (Indeed, an effective method
to discourage theft of the narcotic-based pain reliever OxyContin is
to encourage pharmacies to lock their supply in a safe - yet theft is
only a small source of this abused drug compared with the big, open
pipeline of the Internet.)

Meth use is a mixed picture. It's down significantly among teens,
most likely because they're scared by what they hear about it. But
the number of Americans who have used meth has dropped only slightly,
according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Other data
show meth spreading to the Eastern US and urban areas.

Even if meth use overall appears steady, the big dropoff in labs
frees local law enforcement from the costly, time consuming, and
dangerous work of shutting down and cleaning up domestic meth labs.

That means they should be in a better position to focus on meth from
Mexico, which also has the attention of the DEA. That agency has
trained more than 2,000 officers in Mexico in how to shut down and
clean up meth labs and is also working internationally to stop the
diversion of chemicals to these labs.

The war on drugs has many fronts, but at least on one of them,
there's been real progress.
Member Comments
No member comments available...