Pubdate: Wed, 06 Jul 2005 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2005 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Note: The Journal does not publish letters from writers outside its daily home delivery circulation area. Author: David Ingram Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) COMMITTEE TRIES TO RESOLVE N.C. METH BILL Push-Pull Begins In Effort To Remove Illegal Drug's Main Ingredient From Pharmacy Shelves RALEIGH - A legislative subcommittee began hashing out a compromise yesterday on a bill to restrict pseudoephedrine, a decongestant that is also a main ingredient for the illegal drug methamphetamine. With five of the subcommittee's seven members leaning against strict regulation of pseudoephedrine, the group is expected to endorse a weaker version of the bill. "The access is what I'm concerned about, when you have (sinusitis) real bad," said Rep. Earline Parmon, D-Forsyth, a member of the subcommittee. Methamphetamine use "is a very serious problem," she said, "but there are people who need these medications for more than the sniffles." Some state senators and Attorney General Roy Cooper have been pushing a version of the bill that would put all tablets that have pseudoephedrine, such as Sudafed, behind a pharmacist's counter. Consumers would need photo identification to buy them, and they couldn't buy more than 9grams - about a third of an ounce - a month without a prescription. Rural legislators in the House and some retailers are pushing an alternate version that would affect only some tablets and would still allow them to be sold from behind a grocer's counter or a convenience-store counter. The bill would limit consumers to 9 grams a purchase but would not limit the number of purchases a consumer could make. Neither bill would affect gel caps or other liquid medications, although legislators have talked about including those items. The subcommittee was appointed last week to try to work out differences between the versions, and the chairman, Rep. Rick Glazier, D-Cumberland, held out hope yesterday that they could. "It is important that the groups get together," he said. "It's unlikely that either bill in its current form, in its exact form is going to pass committee." Sheriffs and district attorneys are lobbying hard for the Senate version, while some pharmaceutical companies and the N.C. Retail Merchants Association are pushing hard for the House version. Harry Kaplan, a lobbyist for Schering-Plough HealthCare Products Inc., which makes Claritin, told the subcommittee that it and other tablets should continue to be sold at grocery stores because there are few other decongestants that don't cause drowsiness. "You are stuck. There's no alternative," Kaplan said. Even the tighter regulations would keep 72 percent of pseudoephedrine products on a typical grocery-store shelf, said Greg McLeod, a legislative liaison for the N.C. Department of Justice. Sen. John Snow, D-Cherokee, a retired District Court judge, was a primary sponsor of the Senate version of the bill. Snow said he was disappointed by the discussion at the House subcommittee yesterday. "People's inconvenience doesn't compare with kids who are sick with this stuff and with people who are dying from it," he said. Still, Parmon and others who support greater access to pseudoephedrine said they are not soft on crimes involving methamphetamine. "I don't want anyone to get the idea that we don't think this is a serious problem in North Carolina," she said. Authorities have found 185 methamphetamine labs in the state this year through June 1, compared to 322 for all of 2004. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom