Pubdate: Wed, 04 May 2005 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Page: S1 Copyright: 2005, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Tom Hawthorn Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) NOTHING FUNNY ABOUT CRYSTAL METH Drug Is Becoming A Scourge In Victoria VICTORIA -- Folks joke about grass; stand-up comics riff on reefers; Bill Clinton didn't inhale; Cheech and Chong never stopped inhaling; and snowboarder Ross Rebagliati's Olympic medal was actually Acapulco Gold. But folks don't tell jokes about crystal meth. They tell anecdotes without a punchline. About a frenzied man masturbating on the boulevard. About a deranged woman dancing the Funky Chicken at dawn. About an agitated teenager wandering into a shop while shouting incoherently. He was in search of . . . who knows? Dan Parker talks about a chess-playing cross-country runner, a motivated student who pawns his Christmas gift of a guitar to buy crystal methamphetamine. He talks about a son too often lost to his addiction. "He's the guy next door. If you bumped into him at the mall, you'd think he was a great guy." For 10 years, Mr. Parker has struggled with his son's troubles. He has added locks to every room in the family home in which his son might find an item to steal to pawn for drug money. The home office, the master bedroom, the family media room are all secured. He can live without the valuables, but he cannot live with the possibility of his modest possessions supporting a habit. Besides, in the Jekyll and Hyde world of a drug addict, Mr. Parker knows it is not the son he loves who is a thief. It is the drug. Mr. Parker and his wife joined about 200 others in a high-school theatre on Monday night to discuss ice, jib, crank, speed, sketch, tina. The community forum was the second stop on a four-city tour organized by The Province newspaper. The Vancouver tabloid published a series in April by reporter Matthew Ramsey, whose addicted cousin lives in a one-room wooden shack where among his meagre possessions is a wooden box containing meth. The drug is becoming a scourge in a capital city still wrestling with heroin. Local health officials and politicians are considering the creation of safe-injection sites, following Vancouver's example, which generated controversy and headlines around the world. That debate has only just begun in Victoria even as those in the theatre on Monday raise a cry about the threat posed by crystal meth. As seems de rigueur for these kinds of events, recovering addict Jenny Jones, 28, told her harrowing tale of degradation during three years of meth abuse. Saanich Police Constable Kim Basi drew gasps from the audience by listing ingredients used in making the white powder: lye, rat poison, acetone, methyl hydrate, pseudoephedrine, Drano. Constable Basi works with young girls at risk of being sexually exploited, many of whom regard meth as "the skinny drug." Lose weight, get high. She said the street price for a tenth of a gram is $10 to $15. The two-hour session had its Reefer Madness moments. Gord Robson held up a $9 kit that detects drugs in a user's urine, saying, "If I had my way, we'd test in high school every time a kid disrupted." Audience member Maura Lamb, the proprietor of the Irish Linen Stores, described her staff's fear of handling addicts who wander into her store in the tourist district on Government Street. "There's an underlying current of violence," she told the panel. "When someone wanders into my business, they're confused, edgy. "How do you reach them? It seems they're in a world of their own." One suggestion she appreciated was to offer water. She has noticed how users' bodies vibrate, and imagines such exertion would quickly be dehydrating. The forum was held shortly after the sale of one of the city's most notorious drug hangouts. The Holiday Court Motel was "22 rooms of trouble," in one writer's memorable phrase, a one-stop spot for drugs and violence. The city had its own urban legend about unwitting tourists in station wagons with children in the back seat pulling into what must have seemed like the devil's own driveway. Now, the desperate can be found along the banks of the Inner Harbour, in the alleys of the tourist zone and, especially, in the 900-block of Pandora Avenue, where the Open Door provides food and services, while the adjacent sidewalks and doorways and grassy boulevard are a stage for unpredictable and disturbing behaviour. Crystal meth is so cheap and so potent some cabbies say the day after Welfare Wednesday is known as Overdose Thursday. Marketers push the notion to tourists of Victoria's reputation as a spot of Merry Olde England, even as the port city has grappled with a long history of substance abuse issues from which it has not been immune in recent decades. The City of Gardens has been an innovator in harm-reduction policies, from introducing an early needle exchange to replacing the drunk tank with a sobering centre. Later this month, Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe will travel to Europe to examine supervised injection sites for heroin users. He will be joined in Bern, Switzerland, and Frankfurt, Germany, by Richard Stanwick, the chief medical health officer of the Vancouver Island Health Authority. Dr. Stanwick has nothing but praise for Vancouver's new safe-injection site, which he considers to be a top-of-the-line model. While Vancouver has the BMW of safe-injection sites, he said, Victoria only needs a Volkswagen. He thinks the sites can be placed in existing facilities spread throughout the capital region to service an estimated 1,200 to 1,500 users, not all of them living on the street. A client entering a clinic could be arriving for medical aid, or to inject drugs in a safe environment. No one will know, although he suspects neighbours will soon notice a reduction in the number of discarded needles lying in the grass and on the curb. "There's a lot of support already," Dr. Stanwick said of treating drug use as a health issue instead of one of policing. "They're saying that what we're doing now is not really working. This is a disease." He anticipates much consultation in coming months. "This is not done to a community," he said. "It is done with a community." Even as he tries to wrestle with heroin use, the arrival of crystal meth causes Dr. Stanwick concern. He worries many experimenting young people do not appreciate the drug's addictive qualities, nor its lasting effect on mental health. He knows local dealers have cut ecstasy tablets with crystal meth, creating a potent drug about which a user will be unaware. "It's more than ecstasy extra, it's ecstasy plus," he said. "And it's a devious means of creating a clientele of highly addicted individuals." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom