Pubdate: Fri, 07 May 2004 Source: Orillia Today (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/sc/orillia/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1508 Author: Frank Matys Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) HIGH TIMES: COCAINE SNARES CITY STUDENTS Rhonda touches the bridge of her nose and lets out a tiny giggle. "It feels almost hollow back there," she says, a hint of surprise in her voice. Cocaine can do that to you, eating through your septum and leaving the surrounding tissue raw and bloody, never mind the long-term impact on your body and brain. Yet Rhonda, like a rising number of teens, is willing to take that risk. "You do blow and it's like, 'Wow, what have I been missing?'" says the candid 18-year-old, one of two local students who agreed to speak with Orillia Today on condition that their real names not be used. "Everyone is doing it, it's a party drug." Both enjoy the "rush" and the overwhelming sense of giddiness they say comes with snorting cocaine, a drug that in many circles is becoming as readily available as beer and pot. "You're on top of the world for 20 minutes," adds Sara, also 18. "You (feel as though you) can do anything. Like you can lift a car." Once considered the drug of choice among well-heeled professionals with money to burn, cocaine is gaining in popularity among teens, surfacing with a regularity that has health officials troubled. "It is concerning in the sense that cocaine is moving in a completely different direction than the rest of the drugs," says Dr. Edward Adlaf, senior-research scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. Evidence of its growing popularity among teens was borne out in a province-wide survey of student drug use, conducted by the Toronto-based organization. Despite an apparent leveling off of illegal drug use, cocaine consumption remains on an upswing that is said to have started in the early 1990s. Slightly more than three per cent of seventh graders surveyed last year admitted to having used cocaine, while more than double that number have tried it in Grade 12. "Cocaine is really the only drug at the moment to show any pattern of an upward movement, " says Adlaf. Researchers believe that at least some of that trend is the result of students' changing perceptions, with many viewing cocaine as less harmful than in past years. "The perceived risk is dropping, declining," he says. Cocaine, like marijuana, is also considered to be more readily available than it was in the late '80s, according to the study's findings. "It's surprising in the sense that there haven't been too many situations in the past where we have had a drug like cocaine that would move in different directions than other kinds of illicit drugs," he adds. "It has a lot to do with perceived risk." An Orillia resident, Sara's introduction to coke began at the tender age of 16, in the backseat of a car parked outside a bowling alley. Over the next two years, it would pop up here and there, mainly at weekend parties where students divvy it up in neat lines laid out on mirrors, CD cases or just about anything else with a flat surface, inhaling it through a rolled up bill. "Everyone wants to escape," she says of the effect. "It's human." With university on the horizon and good grades to match, Sara says she understands the dangers associated with this highly addictive drug and considers herself an infrequent user, yet doesn't shy from the fact that, on occasion, she, like many others her age, has indulged in a line or two. "I know what it can do and I'm not stupid, but I like to have some fun sometimes," she adds. Drugs, Sara later declares, "are just part of our culture," In the same breath, Rhonda, a frequent user of Ecstasy and other drugs, has witnessed first-hand cocaine's uglier side effects in the behaviour of others, including violent and uncontrollable mood swings. "It can be scary," she says, adding that, "You need a good head to realize where it can take you if you let it." Though marijuana still accounts for the lion's share of drug-related investigations conducted in this region, an undercover OPP officer with the Huronia Combined Forces Drug Unit attests to the rise in popularity of the potent white powder. "Coke was (previously) seen as a drug for the rich," the officer told Orillia Today. "It was seen as a more expensive drug." But with prices now hovering at a relatively affordable $80 - $100 per gram, this once inaccessible party favour is attracting the attention of teens seeking a new high. "It's a supply and demand thing," he says. "If you can supply something cheaper, than you are going to see more of it. "It is readily available anywhere. It is like anything: if you want something, you can find it." At the same time, seizures of cocaine and crack - a smokable form of the drug - are on the rise in Simcoe County, Dufferin and Muskoka, with police reporting more seizures in the first quarter of 2004 than in all of last year. "From what I have seen, it is more prevalent than what it has been in other years," he says. "It is a lot more dangerous than marijuana, a lot more addictive and a lot more expensive." Dealers seeking to widen their profit margins routinely 'cut' the drug with a range of household substances, mixing pure coke with everything "from baby powder, flower and sugar to rat poison (and) household cleaners. "Anything that is white and flaky. If it is not white, they will bleach it." Unlike pot, a drug Ottawa has vowed to decriminalize, cocaine possession attracts stiff penalties in the courts, particularly for trafficking, he says. - - In part two Tuesday, Orillia Today looks at the efforts of police and health officials to combat the rise of cocaine and educate children as to its dangers. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager