Pubdate: Wed, 07 Jun 2006 Source: Stayner Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 1996-2005 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/sc/stayner/contact/v-scv3/ Website: http://www.simcoe.com/sc/stayner/v-scv3/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3886 Author: Angela Mcewen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?208 (Environmental Issues) CRYSTAL METH CAN BE FOUND ANYWHERE THERE'S METH in the madness of the local drug scene say local police officials. Det. Sgt. Jamie Ciotka of the Huronia Combined Forces Drug Unit recently talked about crystal meth during a presentation in Collingwood. "We're finding the majority of them are in urban centres and they are in populated areas," he told an audience of 130 people at the Gayety Theatre. The information session was one of three offered this spring by the General & Marine Hospital's education endowment fund - money gathered during the Your Future Fund campaign about five years ago. The goal of the seminars, said the hospital, is to help residents living in the Georgian Triangle make healthy lifestyle choices. "You can't assume it's not in your neighbourhood. A lot of the labs we find turn into flop houses or smoke houses," said Ciotka. The popularity of the drug at the street level and the number of home labs, which are producing the addictive substance are increasing in rural areas such as the Georgian Triangle and nationally at an alarming rate. "Seventy per cent of the ecstasy we seized in Canada last year contained meth," said Ciotka. While it was initially a problem in the western area of Canada, drug enforcement units are finding it has traveled to the East Coast and made its way into Ontario. Although it seems like a small leap from crack cocaine to methamphetamine (commonly referred to as meth), in reality the latter drug is a lot worse, he said. Cocaine is harvested from a plant, whereas meth is completely manmade. "Cocaine is not grown here and it's smuggled in through the borders," said Ciotka. This operation in itself brings with it challenges to get on the streets. However, meth is made from ingredients, which can be purchased in many drug and department stores and cooked in a home lab. An initial investment of $250 can easily translate into $10,000 worth of drugs, he said. Crystal meth is one form of the drug, known as methamphetamine hydrochloride and comes in clear, chunky crystals, which are inhaled or smoked. It can easily be produced in small, clandestine labs set up in a kitchen or bathroom, by mixing a cocktail of approximately 15 substances including pseudoephedrine (a cold remedy), red phosphorous, iodine, ammonia, paint thinner, ether, Drano and lithium from batteries. "What we're finding a lot now is somebody can't go in and say I need 25 packages of Contact C," said Ciotka. Usually the person will visit about five different stores and purchase 25 packages, which is then sold to a "cooker." Crank is the smelly, yellow form of meth and the cheapest form of the drug, which is snorted. Lith is produced as a pasty substance and usually smoked. "When people are dealing with meth in pill format, it's a pretty organized group," he said. Speed, glass, windows and ice are other names used for the drug. "The kids in your high school know what this stuff is," he said. "You'd be surprised what your children know." Motorcycle gangs predominately controlled the production and distribution of it. However, this changed through the creation of the Internet since the recipes for cooking and instructions for setting up a home lab are both easily accessible, said Ciotka. "I went on the Internet and sure enough I found a lot of ways to cook this stuff," he said. The initial rush from the effects of the drug lasts up to 30 minutes and the high lasts anywhere from four to 12 hours. "A crack cocaine user would have to take four hits a day," to achieve similar results, he said. What makes this drug more dangerous is the fact it only takes one use to become addicted, said Ciotka. It's the type of addiction a person cannot recover from, and many addicts end up dead. Many of the reactions are very severe and include rapid weight loss, dehydration, brittle hair, extreme nervousness and picking of the skin. "A lot of them think they have bugs on their skin and they just keep scratching and scratching and scratching," said Ciotkas. "The relapse rate is 92 per cent. The immune system takes a beating and everything shuts down." The cooking process is extremely dangerous since the combination of lithium, ether and ammonium can be explosive. The police will not enter a home, which contains a cooking lab without having the fire and ambulance on site. "Just opening the door could cause an explosion," he said. Even though the police wear protective gear and face masks, they still have to be decontaminated after a bust. Many chemicals and contaminants are left in the homes long after the lab is dismantled. "New legislation requires us as police services, and real estate agents, to notify the potential buyers (of former lab sites)," he said. Processing causes many problems to the environment and contaminates ground water and wells if the building is near any. "For every pound of meth that's cooked, there's seven pounds of waste to dispose of," said Ciotkas. Usually people will either flush it down the toilet or dump it in their backyards. It takes between 60 and 70 years for the toxic waste to be cleaned through the natural environmental processes. "There's been many times I've run into a basement very quickly and have to throw open a window," he said. "Now the guys all wear masks. We didn't know what we were dealing with years ago." Through reports, the police are finding that marijuana is spiked with meth, which can be extremely dangerous for teenagers who are looking to experiment. "A lot of older adults didn't have dangerous drugs," he said. "This stuff is affordable and accessible." By staying in tune with their children and keeping channels of communication open, parents have a key role in circumventing the possibility of drug addiction. "I find now through education, addiction researchers and psychologists go to the root of the problem," said Ciotkas. "Taking drugs is a reaction to something else going on in people's lives." People should take note of homes in their neighbourhoods, which have a high volume of traffic at all hours of the night. It could be foot, vehicle or taxi cab traffic, he said. G&M is presenting a second seminar in the series on May 30. It's called Dealing with Severe Allergic Reactions and Anaphylaxis. Home Safety is the final session, planned for June 6. Called The Stephanie Gaetz Story, it features former world pair's champion and child safety advocate Barbara Underhill. Gaetz was Underhill's eight-month-old daughter, who drowned in the family pool in 1993. To register for any of the events coming up, call the hospital at 444-8645. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom