Pubdate: Sun, 01 May 2005 Source: Hickory Daily Record (NC) Copyright: 2005 Hickory Daily Record Contact: http://www.hickoryrecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1109 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH LAB ACT PICKS UP SUPPORT The Meth Lab Prevention Act is gaining support in the General Assembly. The Senate has approved the bill, and House approval seems certain. The main facet of the bill is the controlled sale of over-the-counter medications containing pseudoephedrine or ephedrine, the main ingredients in the illegal drug methamphetamine. We understand the gravity of the meth problem in North Carolina. It's a two-bladed dagger - the manufacture and use - that is increasingly popular. But we're still not convinced that restricting common cold and allergy medicines to behind-the-counter pharmacy sales and requiring photo identification to buy are as important as drying up the market for meth. Anti-drug programs, tougher penalties for making and selling meth and informing parents about the signs of meth use seem to be better ways to achieve the goal. Attorney General Roy Cooper is the architect of the Meth Lab Prevention Act, and he's to be commended for vigorously trying to disrupt the meth trade and illegal drug use. He's got the Senate on board and probably the House. And, we admit there is evidence that the measures endorsed by Cooper and the Senate work in reducing the number of meth labs. A similar law in Oklahoma has drastically cut the number of meth labs. There is insufficient evidence, however, to prove restricting cold pills results in a decline in the meth-user market. We dislike the idea of penalizing legitimate products and the people who depend on them because dopeheads have a yen for meth. Eliminate the yen, and the labs become moot. Too, Cooper wants the General Assembly to fund 13 more SBI agents to bust meth labs. That's an approach we can support. But we must do more than make it hard on those who run meth labs. We've made life extremely difficult for heroin and cocaine kingpins, but the demand for their products remains high - and they're still making tons of money. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth