Pubdate: Wed, 26 Jul 2006 Source: Osoyoos Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Osoyoos Times Contact: http://www.osoyoostimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3873 Author: Lawrence McMahen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) CRYSTAL METH TASK FORCE TO FIGHT THE DRUG IN OSOYOOS & OLIVER $ 20,000 Initiative To Include Reps From Many Groups Tamara Aspell says despite what some people believe, the ravages of crystal meth use aren't just in Vancouver and other Lower Mainland communities. This devastating drug problem has arrived in the South Okanagan, and the Oliver mother and counsellor -- along with many others -- is determined to do something about it. With funding from the provincial government's major offensive against the growing use of methamphetamine, Aspell is heading up a $20,000 initiative in Osoyoos and Oliver to create a Crystal Meth Task Force that will tackle the problem head-on. The project, proposed in May by the South Okanagan Integrated Community Services Society, has received its grant of provincial money under the Methamphetamine Funding Project, administered by the Union of B.C. Municipalities. The host organization is the Oliver-based Desert Sun Counselling and Resource Centre, which Aspell works for. She is now serving as co-ordinator of the Oliver-Osoyoos anti-meth project. Aspell says if anyone thinks the lure and harmful effects of cheap, easy-to-make crystal meth aren't here, she has news for them. "I think there's a belief that it isn't here yet, or it's still just a big-city problem. But it is here!" she says. The proposal for the anti-meth project notes that, at an early age, children in Oliver and Osoyoos see drug use among transients who come to the area. At Gyro Beach in Osoyoos a week ago, she watched as a young man snorted the drug within a few feet of her young children. Aspell gave him a piece of her mind. And she cites the case of one young local man who just two months ago made the tough decision to fight his addiction to crystal meth before the increasing paranoia, psychosis and harmful physical side-effects killed him (see story on page 22). Princeton RCMP Sergeant Kurt Lozinski said recently that crystal meth use has gone up by 500 per cent since 2000. Under the new project in Oliver and Osoyoos, each of the two towns has received $10,000 for a joint five-month July-through-November initiative to establish a broadly based task force that in an ongoing way during the coming months and years will create awareness, networking and practical strategies for fighting crystal meth locally. "The South Okanagan Crystal Meth Task Force will be our communities' response to the devastating effects of crystal meth abuse," Aspell says. She notes the drug doesn't just harm the addict. It has ripple effects throughout the community -- hitting families, friends, schools, and even business owners. In the coming weeks, Aspell plans to contact and pull together representatives of the many groups and agencies involved in the fight against crystal meth. On August 14 in Osoyoos she will host the initial meeting of the proposed task force -- with representatives from the RCMP, paramedics, public health and mental health personnel, drug and alcohol counsellors, parents, teachers and school trustees, town councillors, and business people. She says the aim is "to mobilize community awareness and action". She hopes the task force will form four committees to focus its action for the coming months -- an education committee, enforcement committee, treatment committee, and community development committee. The task force will be expected to develop crime prevention initiatives, hold annual awareness campaigns, foster safe neighbourhoods by working with Citizens on Patrol, and create a brochure outlining what resources are available to South Okanagan parents and youth on alcohol and drug issues. Aspell already plans parent awareness "community forums" in both Oliver and Osoyoos, to spread the word about the dangers of crystal meth use and what can be done about it. The sessions would feature Kerry Jackson, a mother who lost a son at age 26 to the drug, when he committed suicide. The local project also plans to hold a contest among youth in both towns to design a logo for the initiative. Aspell notes that Osoyoos and Oliver aren't alone. Keremeos, Kelowna and Penticton are currently carrying out their own projects to fight crystal meth. And she says Princeton has recently cracked down on abuse of the drug. Money for these initiatives comes from $2 million that the B.C. government directed last November for community-based anti-meth programs. The government said the Union of B.C. Municipalities would administer the funding and could provide up to $10,000 to each community. The government said local initiatives are key, since "they are closest to the problem and with these grants will be in a better position to find innovative solutions." Besides the $2 million in funding for communities, the government also announced last year that $2 million will go to enhance existing treatment programs and ensure that professional care is available for meth-addicted youth, $1 million for a school-based crystal meth awareness campaign, and $2 million for a broad-based public education campaign to ensure that youth and their parents are informed about meth use and addiction. Aspell is confident that creation of a task force in Oliver and Osoyoos will help young people here avoid or overcome the devastating effects of addiction to crystal meth. She notes that the co-ordinator of a similar initiative in Oceanside, on Vancouver Island, says that community "has been changed forever" by the success of their project. * * * * * Local Crystal Meth Addict Tells His Story - -- It was easy to fall into the self-destructive trap of abusing the latest 'popular' drug -- Think the nightmare of crystal meth addiction can't happen to Osoyoos and Oliver men and women? Think again. The drug is easy to make from products like ephedrine, lacquer thinner, antifreeze, Drano, acetone, naptha fuel, muriatic acid, and lye. It is extremely addictive, provides an energetic 'high', and leads to devastating damage to mind and body, including psychosis and paranoia. Here is the story of a 26-year-old Oliver man now working in Osoyoos. At his request he remains anonymous. I got into crystal meth last August. I was in school in another province. I experienced some bad personal issues and became depressed and almost suicidal. At the same time I had long hours of school and work every day. I started to use crystal meth to elevate my mood and get through work. I was self-medicating. I used it to help get me through classes, to keep going and get the work done. But it started to ruin my life. Some people end up turning to crime, but I kept my job. It took a toll on my body. You don't sleep for days on end, but you feel like you're on Cloud 9. You feel great on the outside, but inside your body is rotting out. Sometimes you don't go to the bathroom for days. You're getting no nutrition and your body's metabolism is super-fast. You build up a tolerance to the drug and start to use more and more. I started to lose a bit of my grip on reality. At work I started to feel the cravings for the drug coming on. I was using heavily. People using lose their perception of priorities -- for example, their job versus stealing. People can keep their crystal meth use secret. Friends and family often never know. I started seeing things and hearing things, and experiencing paranoia and anxiety. At one point I just couldn't stay in a bar any longer with my friends. I had to go outside. I felt a panic attack coming on; I was sweating and thought I was going to die. I went home and curled up into a ball. The next day I called my parents and said I had to come home. That was in May and I no longer have the craving for crystal meth. I'm afraid college students and obese people will really start using it. You have lots of energy, and people can lose weight on it. It really gives people a distorted sense of accomplishment, but what are you giving up to get that accomplishment? You're going to see more people developing schizophrenia from it. There is sleep deprivation, for example. Crystal meth is the new rising drug of the 21st century. People are so blind. They don't think it's happening in the schools or the workplace, but it is. It's scary if parents aren't aware of how messed up their kids are getting from it. I really hope parents sit up and take notice. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman