Pubdate: Wed, 24 May 2006 Source: Red Deer Express (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 Red Deer Express Contact: http://www.reddeerexpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2920 Author: Johnnie Bachusky Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) OUT OF THE SHADOWS OF CRYSTAL METH Part 2 of a 2 part series Addicts And Loved Ones Learn Recovery From Meth Is A Long, Hard Road Marie was spinning out of control in jail after her last crystal meth drug bust. She was in a nightmarish place where she didn't want to die and didn't want to live. Another visit to jail featured a beating from members of the Redd Alert aboriginal street gang over a long past due drug debt. Fortunately for Marie, her parents bailed her out after three long days fuelled with gut-wrenching hysteria and paranoia. This time she did not return to the street, her home base for nearly the past decade. She went to her parents' house to try to clean up any way she could. However, the crystal meth demon would not stop calling for her. It ate voraciously at her soul. Marie was angry. She hated the world. She hated herself. Thoughts of suicide dominated her rattled mind, racing a thousand miles a minute. The only thing that kept her clean and alive was the image of her precious four-year-old son. Marie knew she had to somehow get herself straight. It would not be easy. The only thing she felt she could do was to isolate herself in the basement of her parents' home. She did not know where to go for help. In 2003, Alberta was only beginning to hear about crystal meth, its prevalence isolated to a few communities such as Drayton Valley and Hinton. Provincial programs to help meth addicts were not even on the radar. However, police agencies, alarmed at the growing number of criminal activities associated with meth, were heading south to learn more. Meth's fury arrives in Alberta In 2003, RCMP S. Sgt. Ian Sanderson, K Division's coordinator for drugs and organized crime awareness, was invited for three days to attend anti-drug workshops in the American states of Colorado, California and Arizona. Sanderson learned the crystal meth problem in those areas had reached epidemic levels. "We were warned, 'Watch out for this stuff," said Sanderson. "In some areas meth had taken over from crack as the number one drug problem." That same year, police forces in cities in the north metro Denver, Colorado area had responded and investigated more than 900 complaints of meth home labs and dump sites. For the same period, Alberta had only 21 such complaints. "The potential is huge. Once home labs take off that is when you see the real harm," said Sanderson. In 2004, the number of meth home labs investigated by police in Alberta had risen to 37 -- mostly in Edmonton and the Yellowhead Highway corridor. The rise in meth lab investigations across the province included the bust of a superlab on an acreage near Cremona, 100 kms southwest of Red Deer. It was the biggest bust ever with RCMP seizing 21.2 lbs. of meth. It was an ominous sign central and southern Alberta were not immune. RCMP in Red Deer admit they have yet to bust a meth lab in the city, but they strongly suspect they have arrived. If production on meth was on the rise, so were RCMP statistics for meth trafficking offences - jumping by more than 100% from 1998 to 2002. In 1998, RCMP detachments across the province investigated 13 trafficking cases. That jumped to 156 in 2004. Illegal possession of crystal meth in Alberta has skyrocketed as well, from 20 in 1998 to 275 in 2004. "We have seen it in every corner of the province now," said Sanderson. "And organized crime has been involved from the beginning." While police agencies in Alberta have now begun to log statistics exclusively to crystal meth, social service agencies in Alberta and across Canada are lagging behind in accurately measuring the scope of the crystal meth problem. To date, social service agencies and government departments have lumped crystal meth with amphetamines or stimulants, including the club drug ecstasy. In 2004, a national Health Canada addiction survey listed "speed" and ecstasy use but not amphetamines. In the Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission (AADAC) Client Statistics Report for the 2005-06 fiscal year, 15.7% clients reported using amphetamines and/or stimulants. AADAC officials are cautious to point out these statistics include, but are not limited to, crystal meth. These sort of statistics, vague as they are, have led many to believe that while crystal meth may be an issue with a small number of Albertans, it pales in comparison to the staggering number of people using and abusing crack cocaine and alcohol. However, front line addiction organizations and workers, cops on the street and addicts themselves are telling a different and scarier story about crystal meth. In April 2004, the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre (AARC) in Calgary conducted a survey with 33 clients on the use of crystal meth. The survey revealed 17 of the 33 clients reported crystal meth use, with nine of those 17 saying they used it several times a day. "If anybody thinks meth is just a big city problem they are wrong," said Lindsay Young, harm reduction coordinator for the Central Alberta AIDS Society in Red Deer. "Meth is here. It has been here for a while." At the downtown Turning Point building, Young regularly meets with addicts to discuss prevention, safety against overdoses, and safe sharing of drug use equipment. "I'm starting to see more meth out there. Right now I see more smoking of meth," said Young. "I'm seeing an increase with injecting in rural areas. I know there are others in Red Deer that are injecting it." Young added she is seeing an increasing number of older people, in their 40s and 50s, who are using the drug. "It almost makes sense why people are choosing meth if it is going to cost you ten bucks for a point and last you eight to 12 hours whereas the same amount of crack will last half an hour," said Young. The province makes its move Three years ago Red Deer North MLA Mary Anne Jablonski warned government and opposition members that something had to be done about the emerging crystal meth crisis. Jablonski has long held a strong, passionate interest in addictions, particularly as they affect the young. She was a leading force in getting government funding approved for the new downtown detox in Red Deer. The local MLA spearheaded Bill 202, the Protection of Children Abusing Drugs Act. That legislation, which will be proclaimed into law on July 1, will give parents the right to go before a judge and have a warrant executed on a drug-addicted child to have him or her apprehended and taken to a safe house. Last year, she lobbied hard for her own government to get into action on crystal meth, and it paid off with the creation of the Premier's Task Force on Crystal Meth, which is now touring the province and meeting with community leaders to come up with a plan to beat the problem before it becomes an epidemic. "We have to reach the hearts of the youth out there, and maybe even the adults," said Jablonski, whose task force is expected to come out with a report and recommendations in September. "I would like to start with the youth because I think they are more vulnerable, and more easily swayed. If we don't do something about our kids what kind of future are we all going to have?" Drayton Valley, 150 kms northwest of Red Deer, is one such community that did pull together to ensure a better future. In 2000, community officials noticed the drug problem was hitting the town hard. A community task force was created. Shortly after, town and RCMP officials noticed meth was specifically taking over at epidemic levels. In fact, Drayton Valley was being lumped with Hinton, Edson and Whitecourt as the primary meth trouble spots in Alberta. Every community group then rallied. A prevention officer -- a recovering addict - was hired, and RCMP created a unit to directly deal with the drug problem. The community effort worked. In 2004, Drayton Valley was recognized by Health Canada as one of the few communities in Canada that showed a reduction in meth-related crime and health cases. "I would say it is a two-pronged proactive approach about getting the whole community involved on the prevention side, giving RCMP the resources directed to that issue, and the whole community getting behind wanting to make a difference," said Drayton Valley Mayor Diana McQueen, who is also a member of the provincial task force. "We didn't try to hide the problem. We said, 'Listen we got a problem as many communities do and we are going to do something about it." Jablonski, meanwhile, is confident the task force will produce a set of recommendations that will not only wipe out the current meth trouble spots but stop the problem in other areas from even starting. "I hope we can find some way to stop kids from making these choices from the very beginning," said Jablonski. "I have seen how this drug tears a family apart." A family's troubled journey For years Red Deer parents Lea and Ferdinand could not see an end to their nightmare. Their son Tyler was hooked on crystal meth. There was constant fighting and worrying. The young man was kicked out of school in Grade 10 for smoking pot. His using graduated to crystal meth, a run that lasted four years. He stole more than $15,000 in goods and money from his parents. Tyler also got in trouble with the law. "That was an absolute crazy time. There was yelling, screaming and fighting. He was definitely a completely changed person," said Lea. "He was completely rebellious and defiant. Whatever we said it had to be the opposite." Tyler's nightmare became their own. Everything around them was falling apart. They had the "Why me?" syndrome. The feelings of shame were overwhelming. "You feel so disgraced,' said Ferdinand. "There were nights when we didn't sleep." However, Lea and Ferdinand were not alone. Penny, another Red Deer parent, had co-founded Renew Hope 19 months ago. It is a support group for parents of children struggling with addictions. Her story is much the same -- a once fine son whose life was destroyed by crystal meth. She was dragged along with his trip to hell. "I once went to a symposium on television and I can tell you who in the room were the mothers of the crystal meth addicts because we all had big bags under our eyes," said Penny. "We looked like hell because we hadn't slept or eaten. It is hard to look after yourself when somebody you love is going through something like that." The support group meets once a week at the Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre. Participants rely in part on the 12-Steps of recovery. They share their feelings, and learn to cope and carry on with their lives. Penny's son Anthony is now in recovery, as is Tyler. The parents know their kids' recovery is a slippery road. But they have learned their childrens' addiction is not their fault, and they must take care of themselves first. Their own recovery is paramount. "Until they are ready there is nothing you can do for them," said Penny. Marie finds recovery Marie was ready and has been clean for three years. She is now 26-years-old, living in Red Deer, and is in a stable and loving relationship with a boyfriend. Marie has a new second son, now one-year-old. She has dreams of going to Red Deer College this year. Her recovery has included volunteering in the Cole'sKids program, an Edmonton Police Service initiative that sees troubled addicts mentoring the young. She also isolated herself for the first six months, going to any lengths to stay away from crystal meth and all its evil surroundings. "Anything, anybody was a trigger. I would see somebody and I'd say, 'They're tweaked out, I want some," said Marie, proudly showing a government letter that gave her an early release from probation. Perhaps best of all, she is a proud member of Narcotics Anonymous, a 12-Step program to help recovering drug addicts. There isn't a second when Marie takes her recovery for granted. She knows the meth demon and the hellish flyers are only a slip away. "I'm not going to lie. I think about it, when things are going bad and even when things are going good," said Marie. "But if you are really, really serious, and willing to do whatever it takes, you might just have a chance. That's only might. It is really hard." Where To Get Help Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission (AADAC) (403) 340-5274 Web site: corp.aadac.com Renew Hope (support group for parents). Contact Penny at (403) 340-0216 Parents Empowering Parents (P.E.P.) (support group for parents) Contact Jackie at (403) 342-0895, Lorrie at (403) 343-9104, or Deb at (403) 358-5160 Web site: www.pepsociety.ca Safe Harbour Society (detox) (403) 347-0181 Central Alberta AIDS Network Society (403) 346-8858 Crystal Meth Anonymous Web site: www.crystalmeth.org Narcotics Anonymous Web site: www.chinookna.org Cocaine Anonymous Web site: www.ca.org - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPF Florida)