Pubdate: Tue, 13 Dec 2005 Source: Brandon Sun (CN MB) Page: A4 Copyright: 2005, Brandon Sun Contact: http://www.brandonsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2437 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) THE SCOURGE MUST BE STOPPED After sweeping through to the south of us, the east of us and the west of us, one of the most serious social issues of our time -- the dangerous drug crystal meth -- has taken root in our back yard. And unless governments do more to tackle this growing threat, we can expect what meth has done to communities in North Dakota and other places to repeat itself in Manitoba. As the Winnipeg Free Press reported this past weekend, more than half of the drug ephedrine -- one of the components of crystal meth -- that is imported into the country ends up in illegal labs, where it is used to used to make the cheap and highly addictive narcotic. The situation has gotten so bad, in fact, that Manitoba Justice Minister Gord Mackintosh has asked the federal government to allow the RCMP to regulate the flow of ephedrine after critics have said Health Canada has done little to keep ephedrine -- which is a legal stimulant used in cold medication and weight-loss supplements -- from being used to manufacture crystal meth. Manitoba has already taken some good steps to curb the drug, which makes addicts out of 90 per cent of its users. It has started a public awareness campaign, devoted more resources to taking down meth labs and most importantly, limited the amount of cold medication -- which is also used to make the drug -- a person can buy at one time. All those measures amount to little progress, though, if it remains too easy for criminals to import so much of its main ingredient and distribute the stuff like it's candy. In another piece of electioneering, Prime Minister Paul Martin vowed to fight the flow of meth by giving the go-ahead for Health Canada to appoint more inspectors. That system, though, clearly isn't working. Harsher steps are needed to make sure that our towns and cities don't feel the ravages of crystal meth the same way communities in the U.S. have suffered. In North Dakota alone, a state with 500,000 fewer people than Manitoba, 600 labs have been closed by law enforcement officials. In Canada, the number of labs that have actually been shut down has nearly doubled from 25 in 2002 to 40 last year. Meth was recently discovered in some Brandon schools during a drug sweep. It would be naive to think that the problem will stop mushrooming here unless government and police have the tools to stomp out meth labs throughout Canada. That is why it makes sense to bring in the RCMP to police the sale of ephedrine rather than Health Canada, which clearly hasn't been up to the task. It would be far easier for a police agency whose job it is to root out meth labs to also control the sale of one of its main ingredients. That's only one way to stem the tide. Even harsher sentences for those who produce and sell meth would be a good start. So would mandatory treatment for addicts who are under 18 years old, an idea Alberta and Saskatchewan have passed and for which Manitoba's Progressive Conservative opposition has advocated. No matter what, we must be vigilant. Crystal meth is far more dangerous than marijuana and other soft drugs and has the ability to cost our society dearly, in both financial and human terms. We have so far missed the worst of the problem, but we can't assume we will continue to be so lucky. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake