Clandestine Drug Laboratories and Fire Service
The menace of clandestine drug labs has been in existence for decades now and is a widespread issue over all the states across the country. The labs are established in homes, backyards, stores, apartments, hotel rooms, covered boats and even trunk homes.
The police departments and the concerned authorities do invade on intelligence information, several of these clandestine drug labs but the worrying this is the contamination that remains once the found equipment and substance is confiscated.
These materials that remain behind can contaminate porous walls and floor covers, the house heating vents as well as the air conditioning system, let alone the furniture that is daily exposed to the elements. Lots of times the next occupants are not aware of the activities of the previous occupants and even if they are aware, they may not know the dangers that lie therein.
Without proper and professional decontamination, the potential threat and risk of exposure to the dangerous chemicals is very real. This has seen many states to enact legislations that protect the new occupants of houses.
Among the several recommendations of the various legislations that have been passed is the compulsory recording of sales of cold medications which contain ephedrine or pseudoephedrine which is the major constituent of methamphetamine. It also requires the sellers to keep such chemicals behind the counter (Indiana Department on Environmental Management, 2011).
It is due to the seriousness of the issue that the government constituted the U.S.A. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) which is aimed at curbing and controlling the menace.
The menace of clandestine drug laboratories is so serious and portends such great thereat to the American society that the government could not turn a blind eye to the same. From the historical time, the clandestine drug laboratories have been a major concern to the authorities in all aspects. To indicate how the problem is deeply rooted in America, there were 23,327 reported cases of incidences involving hazardous substances (David P, 2011).
The Hazardous Substance Emergency Events Surveillance also alerted the nation that of these cases, 112 which accounts for 0.5% were connected to the methamphetamine (meth), and amazingly all the 112 cases occurred in Iowa, Missouri, Washington, Minesota and Oregon. It is also noted that these meth labs caused in this period, 115 cases of injuries with 79 of them happening to first responders. This accrues to 51% of all the injuries happening to first responders.
The substance that are used in the meth labs are toxic, corrosive and flammable. The equipment that these labs use range from chemical bottles, cans of Coleman Fuel, propane tanks, glass cookware, glass or plastic tubing, coffee filters and heating plates (Asia & Pacific Amphetamine-Type stimulants Information Centre, 2009).
These equipment are home assembled and are not well fitted and in many cases have resulted in home explosions that have seen home owners acquire burns and get hospitalized. These have also posed a danger to the fire service responders who come to dismantle the laboratories since they once in a while explode and burn them. The home clandestine laboratories have resulted into deaths, for instance the 1996 case where three bodies were found dead in a small motel room in Los Angeles.
In an effort to help curb the menace, various states have taken keen attention and interest in training and equipping the fire service with prerequisite knowledge and skills in fighting, and curbing the menace to American society. The fire service staffs in all the states do get training on the clandestine laboratories that will enable them to carry out their activities efficiently.
The tricky part with the clandestine labs is that the training is put into severe test out there in the field where clandestine labs are located. There have been cases of the responders falling pray to the accidents at the labs or intentional malicious traps set by the propagators.
There are dangers that the fire...
Clandestine Drug Labs and the Fire Service What are the risks and inherent dangers when firefighters are facing a blaze that resulted from a meth lab? What should firefighters do when they suspect a fire has been caused by the existence of a meth lab? Are clandestine meth labs more prevalent then they were a few years ago? These questions and others will be addressed in this paper. What States' Firefighters have
Fortunately, no NC responders have been killed, but around the country every year several first responders are injured or die from job-related exposures to these labs" (efilmgroup, 2009). The fire department seems to be at the forefront of the risk in many cases, because a significant number of the clan labs are called in as explosions or fires. In other words, often the fire service doesn't know exactly what they
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