Pubdate: Sun, 30 Sep 2007
Source: Ironton Tribune (OH)
Copyright: 2007 Ironton Tribune
Contact:  http://www.irontontribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3547
Author: Mark Shaffer, The Ironton Tribune

LEGISLATION PARTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR METH'S DECLINE

One issue that police officers always have to face is drugs.

Whether it is prescription pills, over-the-counter  medication,
marijuana or methamphetamine, drugs are  prevalent everywhere.

One of the biggest changes is the use of harder drugs  and one of the
hardest drugs that has become popular in  recent years is
methamphetamine.

So far, Lawrence County hasn't seen the methamphetamine  problem that
exists in other parts of the Appalachian  region and the country.

Ironton Police Chief Jim Carey said the drug of choice  is
prescription pills.

"Just about any type of narcotic prescription  medication," he said.
"But methamphetamine, I can't  recall us having any problem with that.
We haven't come  across it in the city."

Lawrence County Sheriff Tim Sexton said he thinks the  reason it
hasn't hit here is because of their  aggressive tactics against drug
sellers and there seems  to be a preference among drug users for
prescription  pills.

"You would expect to see meth made here because we are  a rural
county," Sexton said. "But our major drug  problem is people getting
prescription pills."

He said his department's concern tends to be more  towards "pill
mills" where doctors prescribe narcotics  with more concern for making
money than treating  patients.

"Despite being undermanned, we take a very aggressive  stance against
drugs, whether its pills, crack or  methamphetamine," Sexton said.

While law officials haven't seen much methamphetamine  in Lawrence
County, they are trying to prepare if  methamphetamine labs suddenly
start appearing.

Carey said he is concerned they could.

"It's all around us," he said. "There's the potential  there because
it is in the surrounding counties. I  think eventually it will, but
there is no indication of  it now."

In fact, neighboring Scioto County has one of the  state's highest
rates for meth lab busts in a rural  area. In one year alone, it had
47 meth lab busts.

Popularity

In the 1960s, illegally manufactured methamphetamine  was mainly an
issue in America's west with biker gangs  being the main sellers of
the drug.

By 1999, the drug had spread across the nation and it  was becoming a
rising concern in Ohio. A state study  found the clandestine meth labs
had been primarily in  the Akron/Youngstown area and were spreading
across the  state, especially to the southern region.

In 1999, there were 36 reported meth labs. In the first  quarter of
2003, there were 174. In 2005, there were  more than 400. But in 2006,
the number of meth labs  started to decrease in part because of state
legislation.

Methamphetamine became a popular drug because it is  relatively easy
to make from store-bought products like  cold medicine and liquid fertilizer.

It takes a toll on the human body that makes its  hardcore users itch.
It is also known to rot teeth and  bring about paranoia.

Cleanup

The production of meth creates about six pounds of  hazardous waste
and costs taxpayers between $2,500 and  $10,000 to clean up since a
specialized cleaning  process is necessary.

There is also a danger to law officers who aren't aware  that they've
walked into a meth lab. The chemicals can  burn skin and cause damage
to lungs and skin.

The major chemical ingredient is anhydrous ammonia,  which farmers use
in their fields as a liquid  fertilizer.

In 2004, a state law made the theft of the anhydrous  ammonia a
third-degree felony, punishable by up to five  years in prison.

Impact

It isn't just officers and users who are affected by  methamphetamine.
Even a cold sufferer going to the drug  store has to deal with the
effect.

In 2006, Ohio Sen. John Carey, R-Wellston, introduced  Senate Bill 53,
which controls the sale of medicines  containing one of meth's primary
ingredients --  psuedoephedrine, which is a decongestant in cold
medicine. The bill was made law in February 2006 and  all varieties of
medicine with psuedoephedrine are now  required to be placed behind a
store counter. People  can only purchase nine grams within in a
one-month  period.

Customers must be over 18, show identification and sign  the store's
logbook so the state can monitor sales.

Carey said that statistics from the Ohio Attorney  General show an
overall drop in the number of meth labs  statewide from 446 in 2005 to
283 in 2006.

"However, while these statistics are promising and  progress is surely
being made, meth still poses a  tremendous danger to the health of our
communities,"  Carey said. "Despite drops in the production of meth in
  Ohio, there are signs that individual abuse of the drug  is rising,
possibly fueled by gangs and other criminal  elements transporting and
distributing the drug  throughout the state. Therefore, work to
eradicate meth  must continue."
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