Error
  • JUser: :_load: Unable to load user with ID: 62
Tuesday, 27 February 2007 02:31

Modesto Senator Cogdill Introduces Legislation To Help Eliminate Methamphetamine In Rural California

Written by 
Rate this item
(0 votes)
slide20Senator Dave Cogdill is continuing his push to eliminate the problem of methamphetamine from rural California. The Senator from Modesto that represents our neighbors to the south has announced his introduction of Senate Bills 591 and 592. Senate Bill 591 would change the possession of methamphetamine from a simple misdemeanor to a felony carrying the punishment of imprisonment in a state facility. Senate Bill 592 proposes creating a new fund within the Illegal Drug Lab Cleanup Account to assist land owners in paying the costs for the removal of methamphetamine by- products illegally dumped on their property. Cogdill says, “Methamphetamine use has grown exponentially over the last few years. Senate Bills 591 and 592 will aid this effort by creating a harsher penalty for those who simply posses meth and by providing assistance to those who suffer the consequences of the dumping of meth by-products on their land.”
slide22 slide21Senator Cogdill’s last bill aimed at the methamphetamine issue was killed in committee in January 2006. The Assembly Committee on Public Safety voted to kill what Cogdill called a commonsense measure designed to curb methamphetamine production by outlawing the possession of more than one half pound of ephedrine or pseudoephredine. Methamphetamine abuse leads to many social problems in communities including increases in crime, child neglect and/or abuse, and unemployment. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, more than 2 million Californians aged 12 or older (or 7.3 percent of the population) have used methamphetamine at least once in their lives.  “As the law stands, somebody who possesses methamphetamine may be charged with a mere misdemeanor, which is not severe enough of a punishment to deter criminals.  SB 591 sends a clear message that we are serious about stopping meth use in our neighborhoods,” commented Cogdill.
Read 711 times Last modified on Friday, 28 August 2009 02:06