Pubdate: Sun, 20 Mar 2005
Source: Free Press, The (Kinston, NC)
Copyright: 2005 Kinston Free Press
Contact:  http://www.kinston.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1732
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

WAR ON DRUGS GIVES STATE EXCUSE TO GO TO EXTREME

Get ready to add another casualty to our failed war on drugs. If North 
Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper and some state senators get their way, 
cold and allergy sufferers who want to buy Sudafed tablets - or its generic 
version - will have to go to a pharmacy and show an ID before being able to 
get relief.

By the way, you'll have to get the cold remedy from the pharmacist - not a 
clerk or a pharmacist assistant. At some drug stores, where pharmacists are 
already quite busy, be prepared to wait in line.

If you're younger than 18, tough luck. Only adults would be able to 
purchase the product.

You won't be able to stop by the grocery store on your way home or go out 
late and night to the convenience store and purchase the items. Sure, 
you'll be able to purchase the liquids, liquid capsules or gel capsules, 
which are sometimes more expensive, but not the tablets.

A bill, introduced by Sens. Walter Dalton, D-Rutherford, and John Snow, 
D-Cherokee, would make pseudoephedrine a controlled substance.

It's all an attempt to battle the production of methamphetamine. 
Pseudoephedrine is a key component in the manufacture of meth.

While the ultimate goal of the proposal - to reduce the manufacture of and 
consequently the use of meth - is a laudable one, this method of combating 
the dangerous drug meth is a bad one.

If the bill becomes law, cold sufferers won't be the first innocent 
casualties of the war on drugs. There are many.

Among them are taxpayers.

The N.C. Department of Correction Web page lists 4,787 people who are in 
the state's prisons on non-trafficking drug charges. With the average cost 
to keep someone in prison a year in North Carolina being about $24,000, 
that's an annual $114.9 million bill being picked up by the taxpayers.

We don't question that the abuse of drugs is a serious problem in North 
Carolina. And we certainly agree that meth is a dangerous drug.

But the push to make this cold remedy more difficult to get is an 
overreaction. For cold and allergy sufferers, it does more harm than good.
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MAP posted-by: Beth