Pubdate: Fri, 17 Jun 2005 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2005 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoon/starphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Charlene Tebbutt, Saskatchewan News Network Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) MOTHER FIGHTS DEALERS TO KEEP SON OFF METH PRINCE ALBERT -- What prompts a frantic mother to take a baseball bat and confront the drug dealers she thinks have been selling to her son? For one woman, it was the greater fear of losing her child completely to crystal meth. The woman's son was already hooked on the drug when she confirmed her worst suspicions. "I knew that wasn't logical," the woman says of her decision to confront the dealers. "It was dumb, (but) I'm angry. He had so much potential." Since confronting those who fed her son's addiction, the woman has lived in fear for herself and her family, which is why she did not want her name used for this story. In later days, she would come home to find an axe on her front lawn and bullets in her mailbox. The woman's fight to keep her son away from crystal meth, and the struggle of other parents like her, is one reason a Prince Albert-based committee has begun working on the issue of drug addiction. The group -- made up of emergency and police officials, addictions counsellors, health representatives, business owners and members of local service groups -- is hoping to create a treatment facility that includes drug and alcohol prevention, long-term detox programs, and recovery and re-integration services to help addicted youth kick their habits for good. As part of its work, the group has circulated a petition calling on the province to make it legal for parents to force youth into treatment for at least 28 days. Linda Nosbush, the group's chair, says the committee wants to create a comprehensive set of services to not only treat those already addicted to drugs such as crystal meth, but provide enough support to eventually break the hold drugs have on youth. While it is not looking to create an entirely new set of treatment services, some areas of service are lacking, Nosbush says. The committee is working on a plan that includes expanded drug awareness programming, more consistent and accessible information, more treatment beds for youth and more support for families, as well as a social safety net to help re-integrate former addicts into the community. Only 12 treatment beds in the province are currently designated for youth. "It really is a social development plan," says Nosbush, an early learning consultant who is also the community research co-ordinator for a local project called Understanding the Early Years. Nosbush says the committee's work is a personal priority as much as a public one. "Little people really need us to protect them," she says. "And as adults, we probably have not done such a good job of that. . . . This is a real call for adults to be something different for our children." Nosbush says those on the committee are willing to work together to help addicted youth here and across the province, if necessary. That's something that hasn't always happened in the past. "Prince Albert is courageous because it's already named its issue," she says. "If you just feel the energy in this room. You can really sense that people have a sense of hope." The addictions committee is hoping to fill the gaps in existing treatment services while keeping addicts out of the justice system, says Prince Albert city Coun. John Swystun. Swystun, chair of the local race relations committee, which oversees the addictions committee, says it is reassuring to see the plan get so much community support. "It can't help but make you want to come on board," he says. The addictions committee has been working since early this year to come up with a proposal for a multi-faceted treatment facility. Members of the group plan to present their strategy to the provincial government at the end of this month. Prince Albert city police Chief Dale McFee says crystal meth is a significant issue in the community. The police force has already been active in radio campaigns and other community awareness programs, including the addictions committee, to fight the drug's growing threat. Officers have also stepped up drug enforcement in the city. But McFee says more still needs to be done to combat drug addiction. "We're not experts in rehab, but we are experts in reality," McFee says. Graham Addley, a Saskatoon MLA who was recently appointed legislative secretary to the premier on substance abuse prevention and treatment, acknowledges there are gaps in current treatment programs. But he says any new treatment plans must fit into a provincial strategy as well so that anyone can have access to services, regardless of where they live. And Addley cautioned against focusing all drug treatment initiatives solely on the crystal meth issue. More people use substances such as alcohol, cocaine and marijuana, he says. "We need to make sure we co-ordinate our efforts and spend the money wisely," Addley says. "We don't have to choose crystal meth over the other ones, but we have to make sure we have a wide approach." In April, the province released several recommendations in response to Addley's work, including a 24-hour addictions counselling line for drug users and their families. Other provincial initiatives to target drug abuse through prevention, treatment, education and a reduction of supplies used to make the drug include more brief detox services, a mobile drug treatment vehicle for northern Saskatchewan communities and a public awareness campaign. Saskatchewan Health also says it will begin to improve existing in-patient treatment services for youth. Addley says his full report on the issue should be out in the next few weeks. After fighting for more than a year to keep her son away from drugs, the woman's struggle is still not over. The nightmare, as she terms it, started when calls began coming in from people she didn't know and her son started having trouble getting up for school and keeping up his grades. Still, it would be a while before she and her husband really knew why their son had changed. "We noticed nothing initially," the woman says. "(But) it seemed as soon as we knew, he went downhill immediately." The woman was devastated to discover her child was using crystal meth. She had already been randomly testing him for marijuana since he was 16 using specially designed urine test strips, and had specifically warned him about the dangers of crystal meth. The first test for meth proved to be negative. But another test a few days later was not. It would be months before her son would admit that for the first test, he took dog urine from snow in the family's back yard. "That's not the son I raised," she says. Her son has since moved out of the province and has been trying to stay away from crystal meth. However, he recently relapsed and is now in an out-of-province treatment facility. The woman says her son's last clash with crystal meth scared him. She hopes treatment will work, although she knows he will deal with the temptation to do drugs for the rest of his life. "I'm not ready to give up on him, but I'm not going to enable him," she says. Having faced the nightmare of drug abuse, the woman has begun helping others cope with the same pain she endured. She attends a support group and offers her phone number to anyone who needs to talk. "It's at midnight that the crazies really set in, (when) you're alone with your thoughts," she says. And while she initially questioned her ability to parent, and tried to punish those she thought were responsible, the mother now says there is no one to blame for her son's choice to do drugs. "You can't cry them out, you can't buy them out of it," she says. "You get to a point where you know you've done all that you can do. . . . Your child has choices to make." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom