Pubdate: Tue, 21 Sep 2004 Source: Fort Saskatchewan Record, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 The Fort Saskatchewan Record Contact: http://www.fortsaskatchewanrecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/824 Author: Chris Munkedal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DEADLY DISCARDS Firefighter training looks at handling dangerous dumped remains of meth labs Fort Saskatchewan Record -- Local firefighters have first-hand experience in dealing with the dangerous remnants of a meth lab after the department offered its first hands-on training session on the subject Sunday. "We've had classroom training on this, where the RCMP came out and did an overview of the product, but it's one thing to have it in the classroom and another to have it in a simulated, live scenario," said James Clark, emergency services coordinator with the Fort Saskatchewan Fire Department. The department simulated a scenario where the remains of a meth lab were discarded behind the outdoor arena building in the RCMP Park. Clark says it's a situation many firefighters are running into. "What they're seeing happening quite a bit now is the end product of the lab being dumped anywhere, and that's just as dangerous," he said. "It's becoming more common, so for us to do something like this is just invaluable." A cooler, a rusty propane tank, ammonia, alcohol, drain cleaner, ephedrine or cold medicine products lay in a pile amongst red-stained coffee filters, and empty containers by the building--these are all common products found at the scene of a crystal meth lab, says Clark. "You can find this kind of thing just about anywhere," said local resident Curtis Myson, who works with Edmonton-based Ever Ready Hazardous Material Services, a dangerous goods clean-up company. Myson was out providing the training session, which is one service the company offers. This type of training has really come to the forefront in the last three years, as crystal meth becomes a prevalent problem said Myson. "There's been five to six incidents like this in the last year." The labs create poisonous vapors, corrosive and flammable chemicals that have the potential to harm anyone near them he said. In this situation, the lab went sideways on the person cooking meth inside the building, and a haze of white smoke was created. The individual discarded the items outside. The department received a call from alarmed neighbors reporting it as a fire. "So they treated it as a structure fire, they pulled the hoses to put it out, and saw a victim lying on the ground," said Clark. "When they came in to get the victim they saw the debris by the building and thought it was just a pile of garbage." He said in the scenario was a case were the firefighters didn't recognize the pile as the remains of a meth lab. "This type of training you really can't put a price on," adds Clark. "Now that the guys have all had a chance to look at it and see what it (a meth lab) could look like, it gives them a heads-up, and now, because they've experienced it, they'll never forget it." He said the training scenario created a situation where these particular firefighters had never seen what the by-product from making meth looked like. "They picked up the victim and collapsed because they were overcome by the ammonia," explained Clark. After that, he said the situation was treated as a dangerous goods call and firefighters pulled on the airtight HAZMAT suits. Clark said when the area is cordoned off and everyone on site is rescued and decontaminated, then it becomes a crime scene. "The (RCMP) could ask us to go back in and separate all the products to make sure there's no other chemical reaction." Myson says these encounters are starting to become more prevalent. "A lot of it deals with the fact that the chemicals to make meth are all readily available." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek