Pubdate: Thu, 02 Nov 2006 Source: Outlook, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Outlook Contact: http://www.northshoreoutlook.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1433 Author: Daniel Pi NORTH SHORE TAKES METH FIGHT TO NEXT LEVEL After three years working with community groups to combat crystal meth use on the North Shore, Peter Defehr, chair of the local task force, wants to take the battle to the next level: provincial. On Oct. 13, the North Shore Crystal Meth Task Force published its draft funding proposal for the Crystal Meth Task Force Strategy Society. Its goal is to share information with any groups mobilizing to fight the drug that Defehr believes is reaching epidemic proportions. "Why have hundreds of organizations around the province all do the same research?" Defehr asks, adding the North Shore task force has a range of educational material, from brochures to DVDs, ready to be distributed. While the provincial government has set aside $2 million of its meth funding for individual communities across the province to develop crystal meth programs, Defehr said the North Shore task force needs more than the $20,000 allotted to them to effectively run the society. Besides sharing information, the proposal, written by North Vancouver resident and task force volunteer Sally Hamel, also suggests forming a coalition to lobby government for help, offering training for drug-proofing children, counselling and developing a prototype mobile crystal meth booth with built-in DVD player. The plan also calls for a Fighting Crystal Meth Conference for April 2007. The society estimates it would require three staff members and a small office with a total annual cost of $186,000 a year. "We've been working specifically on this proposal for the last six months," Hamel said. "We're proposing to offer services across the province so people won't duplicate the same services we've already developed." Defehr said construction of the mobile information booth is already under way and is based on a display created by North Vancouver high school students moved to educate their peers about a drug that's highly addictive, cheap and devastating - often leaving long-term users with brain damage. Defehr, who is also the community ministries director for the North Shore Salvation Army, said he hopes to booth will be completed soon so they can have it out with Salvation Army volunteers during the Christmas kettle drive. "By having that board, it can say more than I can in hours," Defehr said. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine