Pubdate: Fri, 10 Mar 2006 Source: Journal Gazette, The (IN) Contact: 2006 The Journal Gazette Website: http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/908 Author: Sylvia A. Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SOUDER WANTS ANTI-METH ACTION BY FEDS Calls White House Strategy 'Appalling' WASHINGTON White House opposition to congressional efforts to force more federal money to be spent on fighting methamphetamine is an insult, Rep. Mark Souder, R-3rd, said Thursday. Using hotly charged language, Souder accused the Bush administration of giving short shrift to anti-meth efforts and to trying to weaken the drug czar's office. "The United States Congress wants some action out of this administration on meth," Souder said. Instead, he said, there's been an "appalling lack" of an anti-meth strategy. Despite a threatened veto, the House voted 399-5 Thursday to require the drug czar's office spend at least $27million to counter abuse of methamphetamine. The bill would mandate that at least 10 percent of the budget for anti-drug TV ads be spent on anti-meth messages and an additional $15 million be spent in meth "hot spots" nationwide. "Is it so outrageous to ask that 10percent be spent on meth?" Souder asked of the anti-drug advertising campaign. President Bush has proposed spending $120 million next year on the program, $20 million more than Congress approved for this year's commercials. Thomas Riley, spokesman for the drug czar's office, said Congress set up the anti-drug campaign to be national and to aim at teen drug use. Meth is not a problem in major cities, he said, and meth use among youth has dropped 30 percent in the past four years, he said. "We're not saying don't have a (advertising) campaign against meth," Riley said. "The campaign as it is right now is working, finally, and is stretched thin. Further constraining it and further limiting it at a time when it's already very vulnerable, I worry about the effect that might have on its success." The bill also would also elevate the drug czar position to a Cabinet secretary, a move the White House opposes as "infring(ing) on the prerogatives of the executive." Like the vice president, budget director, CIA director and nine other officials, the drug czar is Cabinet-level, meaning he may attend Cabinet meetings. Souder's bill would designate the job as a Cabinet secretary. The Senate has not yet acted on the legislation. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom