Pubdate: Wed, 08 Nov 2006 Source: Valley Echo, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Valley Echo Contact: http://www.invermerevalleyecho.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2140 Author: Lindsay McPherson METH NOT YET FEARED BY LOCAL EXPERTS Crystal meth is a drug that has received significant media coverage since its introduction into North America in the late 1990s. Counties across the United States have been reportedly hard hit by the drug, which is highly addictive, cheap and destructive. Drive across the border and you are inundated by billboards on the interstates with the caption 'Crystal meth destroys families.' While the drug has made its way across the border and use is prevalent among street users in urban centres, there is reportedly low activity of the illicit substance, use or manufacturing, in the Columbia Valley. In a 2005 survey of valley high school students, grades seven through 12, only 1.64% of those surveyed said they'd used methamphetamines or speed. Of the nine individuals who said yes to using methamphetamines, only one student said they had used it more than four to 10 times. "It's definitely worthy of attention," said David Thompson Secondary School (DTSS)-based prevention worker Carmen Thompson of the use of crystal meth amongst valley youth, but noted that alcohol and tobacco have always been the substances most used and abused by individuals of any demographic. Over the years the provincial and national governments have launched campaigns aimed at bringing awareness to the current drug that is prevalent, from PCP to crack cocaine and now crystal meth. In July of 2006, the B.C. government gave almost $2 million in grants to 160 organizations throughout the province to foster a response to meth at a local level. The Columbia Basin Family Resource Society was given $10,000 toward promoting its Crystal Clear Project. The Crystal Clear Project comprises three areas of directing awareness surrounding the drug in communities. An interactive Web site with information and access to resources and professional help, a print ad campaign that would be in areas of higher youth concentrations and presentations will be made, aimed at addressing meth use on many levels, from prevention to detection of abuse. In January of 2007, DTSS will be hosting a group from the Headline Theatre in Vancouver, performing METH, a production aimed at addressing many of the factors surrounding meth use. Meth belongs to the stimulant group of drugs, and was first synthesized in 1887. Originally prescribed to treat narcolepsy, obesity and depression, the drug began to be manufactured in home labs and distributed in the 1960s. When a hydrochloric acid (HCl) molecule is added to a methamphetamine compound during the cooking process, it cools and forms into crystals, hence the names "ice" or "crystal" meth. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine