Pubdate: Thu, 14 Apr 2005 Source: Cobourg Daily Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Northumberland Publishers Contact: http://www.northumberlandtoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2227 Author: Valerie MacDonald COMMITTEE URGES ACTION AGAINST DRUGS A young teen who only identified himself as `Brad' thanks Cobourg Constable Andrew Allen for catching him smoking marijuana. It turned his life around, about 150 people heard collectively during three separate presentations by the Northumberland Drug Action Committee at St. Mary's Secondary School last night. Starting high school was a pressure situation and when Brad first started smoking "weed" it was just casual. He planned to stop completely by Grade 11, he said. He got a "warning" when he was caught the first time but peer pressure got him back into it -- and he added a lot of drinking to the mix, he said. It was the second brush with the law that brought Brad into the Rebound Youth Centre in Cobourg and gave him the support to stop doing drugs, stop hanging around with the wrong crowd and start making the right choices in life for the long haul. "I make my own decisions (now) and I choose my own path," he said. A less optimistic story was painted by Stephanie Percival of Brookside Youth Centre's psychological department. She passed around pictures of a young woman's 14-year progression from casual drug use to that of harder drugs. Notice the sunken cheeks, fallen face, drooping eyes: these are all signs of brain damage, the group heard. Regardless of whether you use drugs or alcohol there will be brain damage, Mrs. Percival said. Frequency, volume, and the different types and mixes will just speed up the process of decreasing motor and verbal skills. And some drugs, like ecstasy, may kill you after just one use, Mrs. Percival added. Instead of just saying drugs are bad for you, she drew an illustration of one of the average three-pound brain's neurotransmitters. All of our brains are dying right now but "whether you speed that up (with drugs and alcohol), that's up to you," Mrs. Percival said. Showing how the drug ecstasy breaks the links in nerve pathways and how cocaine "burns" the sheath covering neurons, she graphically showed parents and students the ongoing destruction caused by both alcohol and drugs. "You can not get neurotransmitters back," she stressed repeatedly. Some of the young offenders whom she tests at Brookside have already adopted lifestyles that have created irreversible brain damage. They needed the kind of information about the consequences of drugs back in Grade 6, she said. By Grades 7, 8 and 9 damage is already done. Mrs. Percival urged parents to be the example by not smoking or getting drunk. And ensure solvents are out of the way so that youngsters don't get hooked on sniffing paints, gas, glue or bleaches, she said. "This is the fastest way to damage a brain." The good news from OPP Detective Sergeant Bill O'Shea, a 13-year veteran of undercover drug work, was that ecstasy appears to be losing popularity because of the publicity surrounding deaths caused by the drug. While marijuana is "the drug of choice" large-scale grow operations are bringing a lot of problems to communities, in addition to the use of the drug itself. These include the molds and fungi created from indoor operations, theft of electricity and the increased level of "greed" driven by the increased level of profit to be made, Det. Sgt. O'Shea said. Organized crime is laundering this dirty money through clean businesses. Eighty per cent of what is grown in Canada is exported. Smaller grows are also operating. "Lots of people are supplementing their incomes" by growing marijuana, he said. "Make no mistake. Greed takes over." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin