13875.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The clandestine manufacture of methamphetamine and other controlled substances has created a public health and safety crisis for children in California.
An increasing number of children in this state are being abused, neglected, and placed at highest risk of harm or death as a result of their presence in homes or dwellings involved in clandestine drug production and distribution. In 1999, more than 1,200 children were found in 2,400 clandestine laboratories seized by California law enforcement agencies. That same year, the number of drug-related toxic “cleanups” in California reached an all-time high. The actual number of drug endangered children is unknown, since many clandestine home labs are abandoned due to fire or explosion before they become known to authorities.
(b) The response to children discovered in clandestine drug labs varies greatly from county to county. In many cases, the response has been inadequate. Services may be fragmented, and untrained staff can fail to recognize the danger to the child. Without coordinated assessment and intervention, children may be left in or returned to these deadly environments. The Legislature further finds and declares that the Counties of Butte, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, and Shasta have implemented multiagency response teams consisting of law enforcement, prosecution and health or children’s services, that can respond most effectively to clandestine laboratories in which children are present.
(c) Clandestine laboratories are increasingly operated in single and multifamily homes, garages, apartments, motels, and mobilehomes in urban and suburban neighborhoods. The dangers to children, those in the lab and nearby, are significantly higher in those counties where most clandestine labs are located in residential neighborhoods. The Legislature recognizes the need to provide financial assistance for those counties that have the highest number of clandestine laboratory seizures with children present, and that have implemented multiagency response teams for drug endangered children.
(d) The Legislature intends to support the efforts of counties that have implemented a multiagency response to drug endangered children that includes, at a minimum, all of the following:
(1) Staffing a multiagency team consisting of law enforcement, prosecution, and health or children’s services personnel or both health and children’s services personnel, to respond to drug endangered child cases.
(2) Coordinating immediate and ongoing medical treatment and family services for drug endangered children under the direction of a child services worker.
(3) Vertically prosecuting drug manufacturers and sellers who endanger children.