KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Police and sheriff’s departments in some states ravaged by methamphetamine may have to scale back efforts to bust manufacturers because federal funds dedicated solely to cleaning up the toxic sites has dried up and departments won’t want to get stuck footing the bill, several law enforcement officials predict.
The Drug Enforcement Administration announced last month that Congressional funding for its Community Oriented Policing Services Methamphetamine Program has been exhausted, and that renewed funding in the next few years was unlikely. The COPS program provided $19.2 million for meth lab cleanup in the current fiscal year.
The announcement left the states most reliant on the funding, including Tennessee, Alabama, Michigan, Mississippi and Arkansas, scrambling to squeeze money out of already stretched budgets to pay cleanup costs that average about $2,000 per lab but can cost as much as $10,000 per instance. The term lab is used to refer to any place meth is made, including in soda bottles inside cars.
While not among the top states reliant on funding, Washington and Oregon have long histories related to the drug.