Pubdate: Wed, 08 Feb 2006 Source: Caledonia Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Fort Saint James Courier Contact: http://www.caledoniacourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3189 Author: Chris Shepherd Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) LOCAL STUDENTS SHOCKED BY METH CONSEQUENCES It can only take $5 to ruin a life. Education Minister Shirley Bond made that statement at a Feb. 2 forum on crystal meth that high school students from Fort St. James attended. Five dollars is the price of a point -- the smallest dose of crystal meth in the Northern B.C. drug market -- and the high can last up over 10 hours. Fifteen students from Fort St. James Secondary School (FSJSS) went to Prince George to listen to politicians, drug experts and former drug users speak about crystal meth, also known as methamphetamine. Angela Marshall, a drug and alcohol counsellor from the Lower Mainland, made a strong impression on the students with photos of meth users. Images of a woman aging 30 years in the space of three years shocked the students. Open sores, wrinkles and drastic weight loss are common side effects of using crystal meth, Marshall said. After the forum, the photos stayed with Aaron Millard, 16. "That was pretty crazy, those before and after shots." Reanne Colthorp, another student who went to the forum, was equally disgusted by seeing what the drug does to users. Asked what stuck in her head after the talk: "The sick looking pictures. They were gross." "Meth is more of a poison than it is a drug," Marshall explained. Common ingredients include, iodine, drain cleaner, bleach, battery acid, she said. As those toxins work their way out of the body "it eats you from the inside out." After the talks -- which included Bond, Prince George Mayor Colin Kinsley, and Solicitor General John Les -- the floor was opened up to speakers from the audience. One woman, Eva, shared her personal experience with the drug. "It took me 30 years to get two years clean," she told the audience. Nancy Colthorp was one of the parents who went with the students to the forum. After the talk she said the students learned the most by seeing the photos of what the drug does to you and then seeing people like Eva, who lived through the experience. Each of the speakers said teaching young people about about crystal meth is one of the biggest challenges facing society. Dave Decoine, a worker at the Prince George Native Friendship Centre, said the youth facing the threats of crystal meth weren't at the forum and they have to be reached using more savvy methods like using hip hop. Decoine's sentiment rang true with Rae Anne Marchal, another FSJSS student. "It was kind of sad," the 15-year-old student said. "The kids that really need to be there (at the forum) weren't." Sharilyn Erickson, 16, felt the same way. Once the forum was finished she asked Education Minister Bond about how to reach youth at risk. "You don't see crystal meth students in public schools," Erickson said, recalling her talk with the minister. "They're intoxicated somewhere else." Erickson said Bond agreed that was a good question and that she didn't know what the answer is. Marshall also said spreading information about crystal meth is important. "Knowledge is the most powerful part of stopping this drug," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin