Pubdate: Tue, 09 Dec 2003 Source: Drayton Valley Western Review (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 Bowes Publishers Limited Contact: http://www.draytonvalleywesternreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/980 Author: Tyler Waugh Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/pseudophedrine Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) LOBBYISTS TARGET METH PRODUCERS Drayton Valley Western Review - Proponents for tighter restrictions on ingredients used to produce crystal methamphetamine got a show of support Nov. 26 from the Federation of Canadian Municipalities. The FCM's board of directors voted unanimously to make the issue one of its top lobbying priorities in Ottawa. Brazeau County Reeve Bart Guyon, a member of the FCM northern forum committee, says the motion was spearheaded by rural communities. "Drugs have, for the most part, been perceived as an urban problem. This marks the first time that the rurals have made drugs, specifically meth, a formal issue," he said. "We have become the shopping grounds for the drug trade in recent years. Our land is so vast and policing it is a challenge, so we want to give law enforcement a better chance." Laws regulating the sale of ingredients used to make crystal meth - like red phosphorus, acetone, and pseudoephedrin - are on the books in the United States. Those laws mean meth producers have turned north over the last few years with shopping lists in hand. In 2000 alone Canada imported more than 500,000 kilograms of pseudophedrine, which was a 500 per cent increase from the year before. Drayton Valley first raised the issue with a motion passed by town council early in 2003. Council received national press coverage a short time later when it looked to the FCM for support. "It's something we feel strongly about. When you're dealing with something as dangerous as meth you want to attack the problem from as many different directions as possible," said Mayor Moe Hamdon. "We took it to the FCM for their annual meeting but nothing happened. They assured us it would be addressed within the year and we think it's great that they've come through." Brazeau County council supported the town's initiative and Guyon, as a member of the Alberta Association of Municipal Districts and Counties and the FCM, helped push the agenda along. Cpl. Gord Chammen of the Drayton Valley RCMP says that meth will continue to be a problem in the region unless the federal government passes legislation that achieves two goals. "First we need to cut off the supply. We bust one producer and another guy steps in immediately to take his place. It's too easy right now," he said. Chammen says the government also has to make it illegal to possess large amounts of certain ingredients. "Sometimes we break up an operation and find these ingredients. But unless we can find some of the finished product there's not much we can do. It's happened to us in town here before. We need the ability to prosecute," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin