Pubdate: Fri, 16 May 2003 Source: Jefferson City News Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2003 Jefferson City News Tribune Contact: http://www.newstribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/845 Author: Paul Sloca, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SENATE REJECTS PART OF METH LEGISLATION State senators considering new laws aimed at methamphetamine dealers rejected a proposal Tuesday further limiting the amount of certain cold and allergy medicines that can be bought in a single purchase. The proposal would have allowed the sale in any single transaction of just two packages or six grams of over-the-counter medicines in which pseudoephedrine -- commonly marketed as a decongestant -- is the sole active ingredient. Missouri law currently sets a three-package limit, which the House had lowered to two packages in the bill taken up Tuesday in the Senate. But senators defeated the tighter restriction on a 17-14 vote before approving the overall bill and returning it to the House. Pseudoephedrine is used in the illegal manufacture of methamphetamine, the highly addictive stimulant that law officers label a large problem in Midwest, Southwest and West. The legislation also contains provisions aimed at deterring theft of medicines in which pseudoephedrine is the sole active ingredient. Under the Senate version, retailers would have to keep such medicines either behind a counter or within 15 of a checkout counter, clearly visible by the merchant. The House-passed version mandates that the medicines be kept either behind the counter or within 6 feet of a cashier, or be outfitted with an electronic anti-theft tag. The House bill also would have limited each customer to two packages of pseudoephedrine medicines. The proposed restrictions had been described as the toughest in the nation by the Consumer Healthcare Products Association, which represents manufacturers and distributors of over-the-counter medicines. Sen. Ken Jacob offered the amendment deleting the two-package restriction, arguing the limit would effectively make criminals out of some sick people. Jacob said he often buys several packages of cold medicine at one time when he is ailing. "We are trying to punish the business person and we are making it inconvenient on the consumer," said Jacob, D-Columbia. "This has gone way too far. There's got to be a better strategy to stop methamphetamine production." Sen. Matt Bartle, who handled the bill in the Senate, said tougher laws were needed to control the illegal methamphetamine trade. Last year, a nation-high 2,725 clandestine meth labs were seized in Missouri -- nearly 20 percent of the labs found across the country. "We have a major methamphetamine problem in this state and we have a major problem with derivatives of methamphetamine that are sold over the counter in this state," said Bartle, R-Lee's Summit. "We're trying to strike a balance here.". - --- MAP posted-by: Tom