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We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in Minnesota. At Drug Rehab Minnesota we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in Minnesota, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in Minnesota. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.

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Meth labs discovered in Minnesota


Methamphetamine is getting to be more and more of an issue every day.

Clandestine labs have been discovered in a number of places, including some in Redwood County, Minnesota.

The problem is even after such a lab is discovered the clean-up is basically a big mess.

Trying to clarify the process for cleaning up such a lab has been taken up by the Redwood County, Minnesota Board of Commissioners, who, along with Renville County, Minnesota are working on an ordinance that would not only outline how to proceed in cleaning up but also who pays for that clean up.

Representatives from Redwood County, v Public Health, the Sheriff's Office, Environmental Office and County Attorney's Office met with the Redwood County, Minnesota Board Tuesday afternoon in a work session to go over the latest draft of that ordinance.

A similar ordinance has been developed in a variety of other counties, and Minnesota Sen. Julie Rosen, of Fairmont, has authored a bill she will introduce during the session that begins in a couple of weeks.


In terms of the actual clean-up, there are a variety of issues that must be addressed.

Sheriff Rick Morris said there has been clean-ups conducted in Redwood County, Minnesota but they have been done by HazMat teams from the metro-area who are contracted to come in and do that cleaning.

The problem, however, said Jon Mitchell of the Environmental Office is that clean-up in a dwelling is much more difficult.

The residue and fumes can get into the sheetrock, the air ducts and the carpet. The question then, is should some of the homes in Redwood County, Minnesota that could be sites for such activity be demolished?

Mitchell said there was one incident where the leftover materials were being flushed into the septic system of a farm and dumped down a well.

"The soil was contaminated in the drain field, the tile line, and all the way to the county ditch soil had to be removed," he said.

Even though the removal of soil is not that costly, when that much has to be removed, it can be.

So, the issue that arises then is who pays for it.

"What I don't want to see is landowners getting stuck with a bill that they aren't necessarily responsible for," said Commissioner Brian Kletscher. "It may be renters who are doing it on the property."

Yet, said John Schueller, "The fact is it is the responsibility of that landowner to watch what is going on on land or in a home that he or she might own."

Of course, then, the problem is absentee landowners.

Schueller said each landowner has the right to try and collect any costs they have incurred by taking that renter, the occupant who may have been criminally charged with the manufacture of meth, to court.

Costs to clean up such a mess have been found to be in the $3-10,000 range.

According to Morris, the first time meth is "cooked," it can cause enough damage to force a homeowner to demolish the house where the lab was discovered.

No one knows the long- term affects meth manufacturing has on those living in and around places where it is manufactured. But, those who know what goes into it will tell you that those kinds of chemicals, when mixed together, are quite hazardous.

Genie Simon of Redwood County, Minnesota Public Health and Jill Bruns of Renville County, Minnesota Public Health have been drafting and redrafting the ordinance that will be presented to the two respective county boards again in a couple of weeks.

Once the ordinance is officially accepted by the board, public hearings will be held before the final ordinance approval.

County board knows that this is an issue that is not going to go away. They also know that something must be done to make sure that public safety in Redwood County, Minnesota is assured.


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