Pubdate: Thu, 25 Aug 2005 Source: Stratford City Gazette, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Stratford City Gazette Contact: http://www.metroland.com/sw/customerservice/lettertoeditor/ Website: http://www.metroland.com/sw/news/stratford/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3716 Author: Robert Roth Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) THREE LOCALS NAMED TO METH ANTI-DRUG GROUP (PERTH) - The Ontario government has named three civic leaders in Stratford to the new provincial Crystal Meth Working Group. Perth-Middlesex MPP John Wilkinson announced the appointments of Jerry McEwin, chief of the Stratford Police Service; Richard Young, acting chief of the Stratford Fire Service; and Dr. Rosana Pellizzari, Medical Officer of Health with the Perth District Health Unit. "I am extremely pleased that these three outstanding people from my riding have been asked to serve on the provincial working group," Wilkinson said in a news release. "I am heartened that the provincial government is fully engaged in finding a solution to the scourge of crystal meth." The province created the Crystal Meth Working Group in June 2005 to determine the extent of the problem in Ontario and recommend ways the provincial government could assist communities, health care providers, educators and police services in dealing with the use and production of methamphetamine. The drug is highly addictive and its production extremely dangerous. Many of the 17 meth lab busts in the province over the last two years have been in Perth County, where the chemicals needed to make the drug (including anhydrous ammonia, a fertilizer, can easily be found. The working group will be co-chaired by David Bedard, manager of the Organized Crime Strategy unit at the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, and Acting Det. Supt. Frank Elbers of the OPP's drug enforcement section. The Ontario government is also intensifying its fight against methamphetamine with additional training and resources for front-line police officers. The province is providing $230,000 to the Ontario Police College to build and equip a mock illegal drug lab. The lab will include a meth production area and a marijuana grow operation to train police officers to properly identify, investigate and dismantle that type of installation. The college has also prepared a training package for front-line police officers on the dangers of meth and its production. The federal government has increased the maximum penalties for the possession, trafficking and production of meth. The maximum sentence for the production and distribution of meth is now life in prison, instead of 10 years. - ---