![]()
|
||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here. ©
2002 The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Sheriff addresses drug concerns There are drugs
in Sisters -- but the problem here is no more severe than in the other cities
in Deschtues County.
That was the assessment Sheriff Les Stiles gave to the Sisters City Council
in a scheduled quarterly meeting on Thursday, August 8.
The issue came up in the wake of student surveys last year that indicated
a significant percentage of Sisters youth have either tried drugs or used
them regularly.
"Yeah, you have drugs here," Stiles said. "You have quite a few drugs
here.
"There is a perception that there is a problem and there is also a perception
that there is denial in the community that there is a problem."
However, the problem appears to be limited and of relatively low intensity.
Stiles said that, after consulting with deputies and school officials,
he concluded that drug use in Sisters conforms to that in Deschutes County
in general.
Mayor Steve Wilson noted that Sisters does not show the kind of symptoms
associated with high levels of drug use among youth -- poor academic performance,
dropouts, crime.
Stiles noted that law enforcement plays only a small part in combating
drug use in a community.
"Law enforcement is never going to be the solution to drugs," he said.
"The best law enforcement can do is deter (drug use) and displace it."
Instead, it is up to parents, churches and community leaders to create
an atmosphere that deters demand for drugs.
City councilors also expressed concern about the rating of Deschutes
County as one of the highest drug trafficking counties in the state.
Stiles explained that the high level of drug trafficking perceived by
law enforcement and legislators is due to the massive movement of methamphetamine
along the Highway 97 corridor.
Highway 97 has become a route for trans-shipment of methamphetamine from
"super labs" in the California hinterlands through Oregon and Washington.
"The end of the pipeline for us is Yakima, Washington," Stiles said.
|
|
||||||