Front Page
International
Finance
Opinion
Letters
Travel Update
People
Sports
To see an image of today's front page download This File
Bureaus
Columnists
Features
Money Report
TribTech
Fashion
Food
Art
Music
Travel
Place a classified ad. or browse the Intermarket
International Funds
Global Stock Markets
Special Reports
Sponsored Sections
Reader's Services
Subscriptions
Paris, Friday, December 17, 1999
Local 'Epidemics' Thwart U.S. In Battle Against Illegal Drugs
By David A. Vise and Lorraine Adams Washington Post Service
WASHINGTON - The drug problem in the United States is increasingly
evolving into a collection of local ''epidemics,'' according to a report
by the Office of National Drug Control Policy.
The report noted, for example, that marijuana had become the No. 1 cash
crop in poor areas of Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, and that
there had been a large increase in the production and use of
methamphetamines, or speed, in Missouri, Kansas and Iowa.
Barry McCaffrey, the national drug control policy director, said Wednesday
that Americans must face the reality that vast quantities of illegal drugs
used in the country were not from abroad. And he said the country must
step up its efforts to combat domestic production and consumption. He also
said that the challenge for law enforcement was to use local, state and
federal resources to attack the difficulties afflicting some communities
and help the nation's 4 million chronically addicted drug users.
''We do not just have a national drug problem,'' he said. ''What we really
have is a series of local drug epidemics. It is not just cocaine out of
Colombia.''
Mr. McCaffrey made the remarks after a two-day conference on 31 regions
around the country with drug difficulties that law enforcement officials
have targeted. The $190 million program is aimed at local problems that
are growing even as the nation's overall rate of drug abuse has been cut
in half since 1979, to about 6.8 percent, officials said.
Portions of Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia alone produce more than
1.6 million outdoor marijuana plants - more than 40 percent of the
nationwide total, the study said. In poor regions, marijuana growers
defend their $4 billion bumper crop with lethal weapons and booby traps,
the study said, ''resulting in an increase in potential threats to law
enforcement-officer safety.''