Pubdate: Wed, 03 Aug 2005 Source: Arizona Republic (AZ) Copyright: 2005 The Arizona Republic Contact: http://www.arizonarepublic.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/24 Author: Mark Shaffer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ARIZ. CITY SET TO RESTRICT COLD-REMEDY SALES IN METH WAR COTTONWOOD - Epidemic doesn't even begin to describe the large, dark shadow that methamphetamine has left over this small Verde Valley city. Last New Year's Eve, a motorist with meth in his system killed a Cottonwood pastor and his two sons before careening into another vehicle and killing that driver, police said. Two months later, police said, an attacker, also under the influence of meth, killed a local man by slashing his throat and critically wounded a woman. More than half the arrests in this city of about 10,000 involve suspects high on meth, Police Chief Doug Bartosh said. On Tuesday night, the City Council laid the groundwork for passage of a law later this month that is expected to be the most restrictive in the state regarding the sale of pseudoephedrine, commonly found in cold and flu medicines and one of the main ingredients of meth. Nationally, Arizona has been slower than most states to try to control the sale of pseudoephedrine, despite having what federal law officials say is one of the worst problems in the country. The Cottonwood City Council read the proposed measure for the first time Tuesday, and because it wasn't a so-called emergency measure, no action could be taken. Nobody from the community came out in opposition of the proposal. On Aug. 16, the council is expected to pass the measure, which would: Limit the total sale of pseudoephedrine and related medicinal ingredients in tablet form to 9 total grams per person in a 30-day period. "The 9 grams is more than enough for anyone who suffers from allergies, and I'm one of the ones who suffers the most," Bartosh said. Require buyers to present identification and sign a log showing the date the product was bought and how much of the compound was requested. Require businesses to keep their sales logs for six months and report to police any attempts to buy more than 9 grams of the compound or any other suspicious activity. Require that the medication be kept in stores in areas without public access and be sold only by pharmacists or licensed pharmacy technicians. Cottonwood Vice Mayor Randy Lowe said Tuesday night that the council needs to take action now. "I think it will encourage Clarkdale, Camp Verde and Sedona to follow suit because they don't want all the meth problems on their doorstep," Lowe said. "I believe this will take off and put pressure on the Legislature to do what they need to do the next time around." State Rep. Tom O'Halleran, R-Sedona, sponsored and pushed a similarly restrictive measure through the state Legislature earlier this year. He said he welcomes the Cottonwood council's attempt to control meth production. "The bill that the Legislature signed off on succumbed to the power of drug-company lobbyists," O'Halleran said. "It will get the pseudoephedrine compounds off the shelves and put limits on purchases, but it doesn't address how much is being bought by individuals per month." Cottonwood Councilwoman Diane Joens said that she, like so many others in this city, was disappointed that the state Legislature had watered down O'Halleran's bill. "I think it was very important for Cottonwood to say that we need a strong ordinance, because it's really time to stand up and say no to this drug," Joens said. Phoenix officials have formed a task force made up of city, county and state legal officials to deal with the Valley's meth problem. The group's first priority will be to draft a city ordinance that toughens up the laws and further restricts the sale of pseudoephedrine. Councilman Tom Simplot said the task force will have its first meeting in the next few weeks, and he hopes the City Council will vote on a proposal in September. In recent years, 40 states have placed restrictions on the sale of pseudoephedrine, and a dozen of those states require that the compound be sold only in pharmacies. The restrictions do not apply to the sale of liquid cold medications because pseudoephedrine cannot be extracted from them for illicit use in meth labs. Drug companies have been trying to come up with alternative chemicals for cold medications. Bartosh said the Cottonwood proposal is "far from an end-all to the meth problem." But he said it's a good starting point. "We've still got 80 percent of this stuff coming from Mexico, but we are doing our best to deal with the domestic side of this," Bartosh said. Lowe said it will be a big help to know that locals won't be able to go into convenience stores and buy vast amounts of cold medication with the meth ingredient. "The identification thing, especially, will be a deterrent," Lowe said. "This situation has gotten so bad here that it seems like every stop for a traffic violation turns into a meth bust." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom