Pubdate: Sat, 09 Feb 2002 Source: Modesto Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 2002 The Modesto Bee Contact: http://www.modbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/271 Author: Michael Doyle METH FIGHT MOVES PAST U.S. BORDER WASHINGTON -- The Central Valley's fight against methamphetamine is taking on a different international cast. Prompted by growing fears that Canadian companies have become major suppliers of the valley's illicit meth labs, some lawmakers -- including Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa -- are pressing Canada to step up its control of pseudoephedrine. It is a common ingredient in cold tablets -- and it also is an ingredient of meth. Drug agents in the valley have been finding empty bottles, each believed to have held as many as 23,000 tablets of pseudoephedrine, and investigators said the bottles appear to be characteristic of Canadian production. Other Canadian jars hold up to 32,000 tablets. This week, Radanovich and four other House members introduced a resolution urging President Bush to "open a dialogue" with Canada and press for tighter packaging requirements on pseudoephedrine. "It's really to encourage Canada to change its law, the way the United States has," Radanovich said of the resolution. He is set to go to Ottawa on Feb. 18. At meetings with Canadian health and justice ministers, Radanovich expects to raise concerns about pseudoephedrine production and its impact on the Central Valley. "It seemed like the best people to talk to were up there, where the problem is," Radanovich press secretary Brian Kennedy said Friday. If it is the start of a dialogue, it may be a long one. The United States did not change its own packaging laws without a fight, as the pharmaceutical and retail drug industries worried about burdensome new rules. Moreover, as U.S. officials have found previously on any number of diplomatic fronts, other countries do not always welcome foreign suggestions about domestic laws. "The economic impact on the legitimate manufacturers will have to be taken into account," Health Canada spokesman Andrew Swift said Friday. Health Canada is the government agency responsible for overseeing drug production. Swift said the agency has been examining proposals to tighten import, export and packaging requirements. One possibility, he said, is a reduction in the size of bottles pseudoephedrine can be sold in. "We've been working on this for almost a year now," Swift said. "We expect the regulations to be ready in a timely manner." In March, investigators discovered several 23,000-count pseudoephedrine bottles at meth lab dump sites in Stanislaus and Fresno counties. A report prepared by the Central Valley High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area noted that a Modesto narcotics agent had seized dark- brown, 1,000-count bottles of pseudoephedrine labeled in French. The Central Valley's large meth industry defies borders. The region's meth labs are controlled by Mexican organized crime syndicates, investigators say, while the supplies can be sneaked in from lots of places. "Clandestine methamphetamine laboratory operators are no longer dependent upon purchasing cases of cold tablets in 60- or 120-count bottles," HIDTA analysts wrote. "Canadian factory-grade pseudoephedrine is now available in unlabeled 1,000-, 23,000- or 32,000-count jars." Any Canadian move to change packaging rules, however, could very well face the same industry resistance that has periodically surfaced in the United States. In 1996, for example, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration wanted retail drugstores to monitor and report any pseudoephedrine sales exceeding 48 grams. After industry complaints about what one official termed an "unworkable" proposal, Congress overturned the DEA and permitted easy continued sale of pseudoephedrine in so-called blister packs. Subsequently, the government tightened some blister-pack rules. Many resolutions die quiet deaths. On the other hand, the meth issue already has rallied a number of lawmakers; 79 House members, from both parties, belong to the Congressional Caucus to Fight and Control Methamphetamine. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D