Pubdate: Fri, 11 Apr 2003 Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) 6256D0500162524?OpenDocument&highlight=2%2Cdrug&headline=House+passes+to ugh+anti-meth+legislation+ Copyright: 2003 St. Louis Post-Dispatch Contact: http://www.stltoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/418 Author: Matthew Hathaway Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) HOUSE PASSES TOUGH ANTI-METH LEGISLATION Stores would have to limit sales of many over-the-counter cold medications and keep those products behind their shelves under proposed legislation that targets Missouri's growing methamphetamine problem. The measure would become the toughest law in the nation, restricting the sale of pseudoephedrine, the active ingredient in meth. The House on Thursday approved the measure 136-12. Now it goes to Senate. For two years, Missouri has led the nation in meth raids - 2,725 meth-related raids and seizures in 2002. Although Missouri meth cooks use several different recipes and a variety of household and industrial chemicals to make the powerful stimulant, all methods call for either ephedrine or pseudoephedrine. Ephedrine is heavily regulated, expensive and difficult to obtain, but pseudoephedrine - a synthetic version - can be found in many over-the-counter cold medicines. Currently, retailers can sell up to three boxes or 9 grams of pseudoephedrine products to a customer. Under the proposed law, the limit would be set at two boxes or 6 grams. Another provision of the legislation is aimed at meth-making shoplifters and is modeled after a St. Peters ordinance adopted last year. Stores would be required to keep pseudoephedrine products behind their counters, stock them within 6 feet of a cash register or install electronic anti-theft systems. The bill's sponsor, Rep. Robert Mayer, R-Dexter, called meth "the No. 1 crime problem in Missouri" and said that tighter restrictions on the drug's ingredients are overdue. Sen. Anita Yeckel, R-Sunset Hills, is sponsoring the Senate version of the bill. She said Missouri's meth explosion - the number of meth raids and seizures rose 28 percent from 2001 to 2002 - requires a tough government response. "Meth is the most evil drug that I know of, it's very addictive and it's causing deaths in Missouri," she said. While Yeckel is optimistic about support for the measure in the Senate, industry groups are ramping up their fight against the bill. "Further limiting access to these products is not going to curb the methamphetamine problem in Missouri," said Nancy Bukar, a lobbyist with the Consumer Healthcare Products Association, a trade group representing manufacturers and distributors of over-the-counter medicines. Bukar said the legislation unfairly targets products that use pseudoephedrine as the sole active ingredient. Many other over-the-counter drugs - like multi-symptom cold remedies and some pain relievers - contain pseudoephedrine, but would not be covered by the bill, she said. Ronald Leone, executive vice president of the Missouri Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association, said the bill will do little to keep ingredients out of the hands of meth cooks. "Meth dealers are criminals, and they are going to try to find their way around any Missouri law on the books," Leone said. "The only people that are going to be affected by this are the law-abiding public and small businesses of this state." Leone said his organization, which represents three-quarters of Missouri's gas stations and convenience stores, doesn't oppose reducing the number of pseudoephedrine products a customer can buy. But he said that the group is opposed to the provision mandating where stores can put the drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom