Pubdate: Wed, 05 Dec 2007 Source: Nanton News (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Nanton News Contact: http://www.nantonnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3200 Author: Aaron Carr GETTING THE DOPE ON DOPE Drugs are quickly becoming a more prominent problem in small communities across Canada as deals move away from the urban centres to expand their business. To help local residents better understand common street drugs, internationally recognized drug expert and former Calgary Police Service Detective Steve Walton came to Nanton to give a presentation at the community centre on Nov. 27 and 28. More than 120 people came out to the event, including parents, teachers, health care professionals and students. The event was sponsored by the Nanton and Area Drug Coalition (NADC) and the Youth Justice Committee (YJC) of Nanton, Stavely and Claresholm with the YJC financing the event and the NADC organizing. Walton had a lot of praise for the event and for the town for getting it off the ground. "Drug criminals know this is going on," Walton said. Walton, a 25-year veteran of the Calgary Police Service with many of those years spent undercover, is highly educated in narcotics and maintains membership in many international drug agencies. "I've been qualified by all of the courts in Canada as a drug expert," Walton said. Walton has published several best-selling books on the subject, and he teaches at Mount Royal College, Bow Valley College and SAIT. "Sometimes when people use drugs, they change and they're not the people we knew," Walton said. "They are lost to us in so much as drugs change who they are." It is a desire to help prevent people from experiencing this change that motivates Walton to continue his work. "Every drug addict that I've ever encountered didn't want to be a drug addict," Walton maintains, adding that most just wish they could go back in time and make different decisions. There are four pillars fundamental in preventing drug use, as agreed upon by both law enforcement experts and sociologists alike: law enforcement, education treatment and harm reduction. In the past, the most common methods of drug use included smoking and injection. After extensive education campaigns over the last decade about the dangers of these two methods, drug users are now relying on snorting and topical applications. "But it does show that education works," Walton said. Amongst youth, curiosity is the primary cause of drug experimentation. Walton sites lack of education and family and peer influence. "If we don't talk to our kids about drugs, how will that be interpreted by them," Walton asked, stating that most kids assume it means their parents either are not opposed to drugs or that they just don't care. "You have to be aware of what your child is listening to, what they're watching and what they view on the internet," Walton said, noting that drug recipes can be easily found online. Within the drug world, there are two main age groups that are affected, the 12-to-17-year-olds, who are the most vulnerable, and the 18-to-24-year-olds, who consume the most drugs. "Please do not rule out powerful drugs in regards to young people," Walton warned. The "big five drugs" to watch out for in these age groups are marijuana, methamphetamine (or "ecstasy", "E"), cocaine, heroin and PCB (or "angel dust"). Drug dealers are also getting smarter in the way they market their product. Walton noted that in the past, cocaine was sold as an 8 Ball for $1,000. Today, dealers are breaking those into 200 pieces and selling them for $5 a pop, making it more accessible to a wider range of people, especially children. Walton also warns of drug usage by sexual predators. Surprisingly, the most common date rape drugs, based on a University of Texas study, are alcohol and marijuana. "Most of the crimes are not crimes of coercion, they're crimes of charisma," Walton said. Walton suggests starting drug education early in the child's development, as early as three years old. "The younger the better," Walton said. While many people in small communities would like to think that this sort of criminal activity is reserved for the cities, Walton says that's not the case. "They're tired of the big city and they're coming your way," Walton said. "The urban drug plights are yours too, because the criminals are making it that way." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek