Pubdate: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 Source: Delta Optimist (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Website: http://www.delta-optimist.com/ Contact: 5485 - 48th Avenue, Delta B.C. V4k 1X2 Phone: 946-4451 Fax: 946-5680 Classified 940-4460 Fax 270-2248 Author: Maureen Gulyas DISCARDED NEEDLES FOUND WITH ALARMING FREQUENCY Police Investigate As Syringes Found At Several Ladner Sites It was earlier this week when a Ladner resident stepped into the Optimist office and told an employee there were used needles on the front landscaping. There were four of them, one which still had a clear substance inside. Across the street, Petro Canada gas station employees couldn't believe it when they found six needles inside the toilet tank in their public washroom two weeks ago. Station owner Anne Zbitnoff said staff checked the toilet because it wasn't working properly. Luckily, Zbitnoff had a needle retrieval kit given to the station two years ago by the garbage collection company it employs. Up until this month, there was never a need for it. "There seems to be a proliferation of these things around here in the last month," she said. Petro Can employee Stephanie Beharrell mentioned the discovery to a customer who lives nearby. "She said that she had walked through the undeveloped area (of a nearby townhouse complex) and had already seen a few needles." Delta police drug section Sgt. Ken Mills said while there's always been cocaine in Ladner, officers have seen a recent increase in the number of needle users. "We've been made aware of the problem and we are investigating," he said. Police are trying to learn just what kind of drug is floating around Ladner Officers have been unable to confirm if it's heroin, cocaine or a combination of the hard drugs, known on the street as a "speed ball." Mills said police are interested in hearing from the public when they find needles because drug unit members want to know where the used syringes are turning up. Mills cautions people not to handle the syringes and to call police if they're not sure what to do. The South Delta Health Unit says people can collect the needles using tongs or pliers. The needles must be placed in a puncture-free container like a glass jar or a coffee can with a lid. After that, needles can be placed in the garbage or returned to a pharmacy. A provincial Ministry of Health hand-out instructs people to wash their hands with soap and water even if the proper precautions are taken. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth