Pubdate: Wed, 20 Sep 2006 Source: St. Albert Gazette (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 St. Albert Gazette Contact: http://www.stalbertgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2919 Author: Cory Hare Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) METH PLAN LAUNCHED Colleen Klein Calls On The Government To Implement 83 Recommendations The province's crystal meth task force released 83 recommendations to the government Tuesday. The report calls on the government to add at least 100 detoxification beds and 200 treatment beds across Alberta and to create a central fund that would be accessible by communities, police, service providers and distributed by an implementation team established by the province. The report didn't include a price tag for the fund or any of the recommendations. Health Minister Iris Evans said she plans to start implementing some of the ideas right away. With additional beds costing around $100,000 each, the cost to her department alone would run in the tens of millions, she said, but the province needs to act. The crystal meth task force was headed up by Colleen Klein, Premier Ralph Klein's wife. Its report comes after an 11-month consultation and review process. The recommendations centre around three main themes -- prevention, treatment and getting tough on those who make and sell the addictive drug. The report includes several recommended changes to Canada's criminal code. Klein will send a copy to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and expects co-operation from the federal government. "I think that they would have to be supportive, for God sakes, it's going to save the lives of youth," she said. St. Albert resident Chris Uttley, co-chair of Parents Empowering Parents, applauded the report's recommendations. She especially liked its emphasis on a team approach, the sharing of information among health officials and more education in schools. She also liked the idea of creating local drug treatment courts and amending the criminal code to keep those charged with the manufacture, possession and trafficking of crystal meth in jail before trial and after conviction. On the downside, however, she thought more attention could have been paid to providing support for families of crystal meth users. "They're always looking at the service provider to do all of this. They really have missed what the family can also add to it. My feeling is they've come at it from the point of view of a child that's been abandoned or neglected or a family that's at risk." But not all meth users come from at-risk homes, she said. A former addict who runs St. Albert's Crystal Meth Anonymous meetings said the call for more education in schools would be particularly beneficial for St. Albert youth, many of whom come from affluent homes. "They often have the misconception that they'll never end up on the street," she said. "There's only three places that these people end up and that's jails, institutions or death. There is no high class drug addict." A lot of drug traffickers get conditional sentences and end up serving their time in the community, said Mike Moulds of the St. Albert RCMP drug unit. His desired approach, minimum sentences, was missing from the recommendations. "I agree tightening up on everything, but you can make all the recommendations in the world but if the court system isn't going to follow up on those in terms of sentencing, you're back to square one again." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom