The good news in methland USA
is that cops are seeing fewer "mom and pop" methamphetamine labs. The bad news is the
stuff now just flows in from Mexico.
My friend, National Public Radio correspondent
Howard Berkes, reports that the decline of the small, homegrown meth
lab is likely tied to states making it more difficult to get the ingredients
for meth -- most notably cold medications.
There is also the side benefit of fewer children and cops
being exposed to the chemicals in the houses. But don't get the idea that the
meth epidemic is declining. The estimated number of addicted meth
users nationwide doubled in the past five years, according to the National Survey on Drug
Use and Health.
Berkes reports:
From 1998 to 2003, more than 38,000 small meth labs were
discovered in rural areas -- more than those found in cities and suburbs
combined. More than 10,000 labs were seized in 2003 alone, the peak year for
small labs. They were typically set up in bathrooms, kitchens, motel rooms,
cars and abandoned buildings.
But
in 2004, states began restricting purchases of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine,
key ingredients in some meth recipes. Congress responded a year later with a federal
law. The impact on meth labs was swift and dramatic, especially in the Midwest,
where meth makers were especially prolific.
Meth
lab seizures are down 55 percent in Missouri,
73 percent in Iowa and Kansas,
and 88 percent in Nebraska,
according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Labs persist in
places where meth cooks "smurf" for ephedrine and pseudoephedrine -- a
process that involves "surfing" from store to store, buying the
typical limit of two packages of medicine, and building up a small supply.
Police
in Aurora, Mo.,
a town of 8,000 on the edge of the Ozarks, used to find a meth lab a month.
"Meth
is [the] No. 1 problem we have with drugs and narcotics," said Rick
Batson, Aurora's police chief.
"It's the drug of choice in this part of the country. Over the last eight
or nine years, it's been a severe problem."
Now
Aurora police find meth labs an
average of once year.
"So,
we don't have that meth problem," Batson says, "but what we have now
is something called (Mexican) 'ice.' "
Ice is more potent than meth, and some counties say they are
seeing more overdoses because users do not expect the drug to be so strong.
Make sure you see how NPR produced this story online with photographs, audio and
even an interactive map showing how illegal drugs make it into the United
States. This story goes way beyond radio
reporting.
In January, The New York Times took a look at the decline of the
small-time domestic meth lab. That story said:
Federal officials say there are 1.4 million methamphetamine
addicts in the United States,
concentrated in the West, where the drug began to take hold in the late 1980's,
and the Midwest and South, where it moved in the mid-
and late 1990's.
According to data from the Bureau
of Justice Statistics, approximately
23.5 percent of state prisoners and 17.9 percent of federal prisoners surveyed in 2004
indicated that they used meth sometime during their lives.
Here are some additional resources listed by the Office of National Drug Control Policy:
- National Clandestine Laboratory
Register: This Drug Enforcement Administration resource contains addresses of locations where law enforcement agencies reported they found chemicals or other items that indicated the presence of either clandestine drug laboratories or dumpsites.
- MethResources.gov: A tool for policymakers, law enforcement
officials, treatment and prevention professionals, businesses and retailers,
and anti-drug activists. The comprehensive site brings together information and
resources available to communities on the topic of methamphetamine.
Group
Protests Spykes
Wednesday I told you
about a trendy new product that is about
the size of a nail polish bottle, comes in perky flavors and sells for a buck.
It also is a malt liquor.
By late yesterday afternoon, the Center for Science in
the Public Interest was calling for
state attorneys general to investigate the sale of the product, and the group asked the
manufacturer for a recall. The CSPI says the drinks are aimed at teenagers.
Outlawing "Negative" Baseball Chatter
In a few weeks,
kids all over America will take to Little League fields. In Cincinnati, for the first time, Little Leaguers
will be forbidden from using "negative chatter."
The
(Cincinnati) Enquirer
says the Knothole Club of Greater Cincinnati will abide by the following rule from Major League Baseball:
No manager, player, substitute, coach,
trainer or batboy shall at any time, whether from the bench, the coach's box or
on the playing field or elsewhere, use language which will in any manner refer
to or reflect upon opposing players, an umpire, or any spectator.
The Enquirer's story says:
Proponents of the new edict say it was a necessary response to
increased incidents of taunting. They cite one especially ugly example from
June, involving a game in Colerain Township between two teams of
14-year-olds in the A-2 division. One parent received 15 stitches after a
player whacked him on the forehead with a metal-spiked baseball shoe.
The incident began with a coach being ejected for arguing a balk
call and escalated into a full-scale brawl.
I think that under the
rule, "Hey
batterbatterbatter, swing batter!" is still OK.
91% of Americans Believe in God
Newsweek's
poll numbers come just in time for Holy Week.
Can
You Stop the Phone Books?
CBS4 in Denver
looked into how and whether you can stop companies from sending you phone books.
I don't know about you, but I rarely use a phone book these days. Instead, I go online
to find phone numbers.
But stopping the bulky books may not be as easy as you
think. In fact, delivery may even be required by state regulation.
The station said its investigation shows that bales of the books end up
unused in recycling centers. Click here to
find out, in some states, who will recycle your phone book.
In these days when it is possible to block junk mail and
phone solicitations, shouldn't we more easily be able to stop unwanted
phone books?
Some cities, such
as Louisville, Ky., urge phone book recycling fairly aggressively. The Courier
Journal says recycled phone books are used in mulch, roofing materials, newsprint, egg cartons and new
telephone directories.
Al's
Morning Multimedia
This week, Poynter Online
produced a podcast with judges from the Best of Photojournalism's "Best of the Web" contest.
The podcast explains what the judges see as the state of online multimedia
photojournalism.
You can see the "Best of the Web" winners here.
Two of my favorites among the winners -- "Rising
From Ruin," where two towns recover from Katrina. The site includes
diaries, a photo tour and more.
And go to "A Prayer
for Father Tim" to see how great multimedia storytelling gets stronger when
you make good use of audio. The judges
said it is clear that still photographers are learning what TV photojournalists
know -- to capture great video, you have to listen to the story around you. It is
not enough just to have a great eye when you are capturing a moving image or a
multimedia slideshow story.
Attention teachers: This site will provide weeks worth of
teaching material for your multimedia classes.
We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.
Editor's
Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story
excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as
original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly
from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided
whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends upon the
accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and
inaccuracies found will be corrected.
Al, I worked in Denver as public safety manager for...