Pubdate: Thu, 04 May 2000 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2000, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: 333 King St. E., Toronto, Ontario M5A 3X5 Canada Fax: (416) 947-3228 Website: http://www.canoe.ca/TorontoSun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/newsgroups.html Author: Zen Ruryk and Antonella Artuso, City Hall Bureau RAVES HISTORY, LASTMAN SAYS Mayor wants council to end city-sanctioned parties The party's over for kids who attend raves at Exhibition Place. Mayor Mel Lastman said yesterday that he will call on Toronto council next week to pull the plug on city-sanctioned raves. "What it turns out to be is a place for drug pushers," Lastman said. "That's where they get known. That's where they sell their drugs." City councillors voted in December to set safety standards for raves, insisting they would rather see kids enjoying sanctioned parties than dying at underground events. "I, too, thought if you have them under a controlled atmosphere ... you can control these things. You can't," Lastman said Police made 47 arrests at two raves held on the city-owned Exhibition Place grounds: The first on March 25 attracted 13,000 young people; the second on April 22 drew 8,000. Police laid 95 drug-related charges and seized Ecstasy, Special K, cocaine, crack, hash and marijuana at the two events. Police Chief Julian Fantino has asked city councillors to cancel a third rave planned for Halloween. Councillor Joe Pantalone, chairman of the board of governors at Exhibition Place, said that simply pulling the plug on raves is not going to solve the problem. However, he added he would support putting an end to raves as long as city officials explore other options for entertaining young people in a drug-free environment. Pantalone said politicians must consider whether young people will go to illegal events where they'll be in danger if raves, which meet city-imposed safety standards, are banned. Meanwhile, a "rave" bill will give municipalities and police greater control over the popular parties which led to nine Ecstasy-related deaths last year and four this year in Ontario. Liberal MPP Sandra Pupatello, who introduced the private member's bill yesterday, said she was offered the illegal drug Ecstasy on a fact-finding trip to a Windsor-area rave. "I did find many, many ... very young people out in the middle of the night and most of them stoned," Pupatello said. "It took about 20 minutes from my arrival to be offered the Ecstasy for $35." Her bill would make it illegal to hold a rave without a municipal permit and allow police to visit the all-night parties. Fines would range up to $50,000 or a six-month jail term for a person or corporation illegally holding a rave, and includes fines of up to $5,000 for partyers who refuse to leave when told so by the police. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg