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Walk Your Land Program Educates
Landowners | |
![]() Members of the Pennyrile Narcotics Task Force clean up the remnants of an illegal methamphetamine lab. “We really hope to get farmers and landowners, outdoors people, anyone who has a chance at seeing these clandestine meth production areas to really know what they are, know how to deal with them and know whom to call.” Torey Earle, McCracken County 4-H Youth Development Extension agent and chair of the drug awareness quick response team |
By Laura Skillman PRINCETON,
Meth labs can be found almost
anywhere from homes to rural farm land. The production, or “cooking”
process, and waste left behind can be dangerous to people, animals and the
environment. For every pound of meth produced, about six pounds of
hazardous waste is left behind, said Cheyenne Albro, director of the
Pennyrile Narcotics Task Force. The Walk Your Land program is
an effort to educate all property owners about meth production and then
get them to check their properties. Most people would not expect to find
the remnants of a lab on their property, and most would not realize what
it was even if they came across one. “The components are things that
we use in everyday life--gallon fruit jars, aquarium tubing, plastic
spoons, plastic bowls, glassware," Albro said. “Because of that they are
often overlooked as being a lab and when someone sees them in the woods or
locates them, they don’t realize the dangers associated with them. They
think it’s just a bag of trash.” Tackling drug abuse and
awareness, especially methamphetamines, is an area where Extension in
western “We really hope to get farmers
and landowners, outdoors people, anyone who has a chance at seeing these
clandestine meth production areas to really know what they are, know how
to deal with them and know whom to call,” said Torey Earle, McCracken
County 4-H Youth Development Extension agent and chair of the drug
awareness quick response team. Besides encouraging owners to
regularly examine their property, the program provides a photo
identification guide of items that might indicate methamphetamine
production. “One of the biggest things we
try to get across in the Walk Your Land program is if you see anything
unusual, first learn to recognize what it is,” Earle said. “If it's trash,
leftover meth production, don’t touch it, don’t smell it, don’t shake it,
don’t try to do anything, just call someone immediately.” The photo identification guides
will be available at “By organized vigilance, they
have fewer options for them to cook and that’s what we want to happen,”
said Doug Burnham, HEEL program specialist. To help get the program
rolling, the Pennyrile Narcotics Task Force has agreed to take the program
one step further by co-sponsoring a pilot program with Cooperative
Extension beginning Nov. 8 through Dec. 31. Farm or land owners who believe
they may have an abandoned meth lab on their property and would like to
participate in To learn more about the Walk
Your Land Program contact a local
-30- Writer: Laura Skillman 270-365-7541 ext. 278 Source: Torey Earle, 270-554-9520 Return to Main News page. |