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MAPP-SD, a project of Prairie View Prevention Services, Inc., is a comprehensive Methamphetamine awareness and prevention project. 
MAPP-SD is dedicated to:
u   Increase awareness of Meth and the problems associated with its use, manufacture and distribution;
u Provide, at no cost, professional Meth awareness and prevention education to groups and organizations on a community, regional and statewide level;
u Be a no-cost, ongoing resource for South Dakota citizens to deal with issues rising from the manufacture, use and distribution of Meth.

 

NCAI Leaders, Lawmakers Vow to Conquer Indian Country’s Meth Problem


Battle on Meth in Indian Country

NCAI Vow to Conquer Indian Country’s Meth Problem

Rosebud Tracks Meth Increase

Seven Values of Dakota Life

Iktomi Turns into Meth (A true story)

Join the Battle

Meth Wreaks Havoc on Reservations
(News article from Casper, Wyoming)

 

Session brings promise of congressional hearings
By
Sam Lewin 3/1/2006

Concerns over the epidemic of Meth use dominated the annual winter session of the National Congress of American Indians, the NCAI reports.
"Methamphetamine is killing our people and devastating our communities,” said NCAI president Joe Garcia.
With many people living in Indian Country likely already witnessing firsthand the problems Meth brings, Garcia cited a newspaper article to hammer the issue home.
"According to a report by the Denver Post, from 2003 to 2004 – the year characterized by the highest documented increase in crystal Methamphetamine use – criminal charges for drug possession increased 353 percent, assaults tripled, theft nearly doubled, and child abuse increased by 85 percent on the Wind River Indian Reservation. Similar reports are cropping up from reservations nationwide,” Garcia said. “Farther south, the Navajo Nation has experienced a more than 100 percent increase in Meth use on the reservation in the past five years. Recent data from the Indian Health Service estimate that 30 percent of American Indian youth have experimented with Methamphetamines."
A tribal leader reported on the impact Meth has had on her community. 
"There have been 120 suicide attempts and 84 actual suicides in my tribe alone since 2002," said San Carlos Apache Chairwoman Kathleen Kitcheyan. "Some of these were directly related to the abuse of Meth. Last year, in my tribe, 63 babies were born addicted to crystal Meth. This has to change."
Meth use in Oklahoma appears to be on the decline. Officials credit this to a 2004 law restricting the sale of cold tablets, but at least one elected official says the problem, while perhaps diminished, is still too large to ignore.
"Meth trafficking is destroying our communities. Sales restrictions like Oklahoma's are an important and necessary step in combating this epidemic, but not the end of the road, Oklahoma,” U.S. Representative Dan Boren said during the winter session. “Just because people aren't making Meth doesn't mean they're not using it. Local, state and tribal officials in Oklahoma are now seeing fewer Meth labs, but just as much of the drug as high-quality Meth from the super labs in Mexico flood the state. We have to address this problem on all fronts.”
The attacks on Meth were more than just words. The winter session closed with a vow from Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.) Byron Dorgan (D-ND) to hold congressional hearings. Officials will examine proposals laid out by Garcia, including input from the both the White House and other tribal leaders on an initiative for interagency cooperation on drug enforcement.
"What it represents is another terrible, terrible attack on Indian Country," said McCain.
Also during the NCAI session, the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community of Minnesota donated $1 million to the Embassy of Tribal Nations Capital Campaign. The campaign is an effort to establish an “embassy” in Washington, D.C.
“It makes great sense for there to be an Indian Embassy in the nation's Capitol," said Shakopee Vice-Chairman Glynn A. Crooks "When Indian people are in town visiting their Senators and Congressman they will also have a place they can call home."  From Native American Times

 

 

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