Pubdate: Sun, 30 Dec 2007 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Ryan Cormier, The Edmonton Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DRUG BOMB DEFUSED Meth Production Fails to Catch Fire EDMONTON - The much feared explosion of methamphetamines on Edmonton streets has fizzled. Declared a massive threat by police just two years ago, with warnings of mushrooming underground labs cooking up the cheap drug, the meth scare has failed to materialize for mundane reasons, says Staff Sgt. Kevin Galvin, head of the EPS co-ordinated crime unit. Like any for-profit venture, he says meth production was vulnerable at its bottom line -- it was bad business. "Meth is very difficult to manufacture, there's a lot of risk. There's a lot of elements and ingredients to maintain and it's easy to be discovered. It's just not cost-effective, compared to cocaine." Methamphetamine stimulates the central nervous system and cuts interest in food or sleep. A cheap and long-lasting drug, meth is made with ingredients ranging from cold medications to paint thinner and anhydrous ammonia. It can be smoked, sniffed or injected. But production of the drug is both financially and physically risky. There are toxic containers and waste to be disposed of, and the threat of lethal fumes and explosions. "There's a number of well-known cooks in the region with a lot of injuries from when things went wrong," Galvin says. The inherent challenges have forced many labs to close, or move to rural areas where there is less chance of discovery, say police. Keeping home-based labs from proliferating is key to keeping a tight lid on meth use, says Staff Sgt. Ian Sanderson of the RCMP's drug and organized crime unit. While areas in the United States, Australia and Canada have high concentrations of meth, the same hasn't happened in Alberta, he points out. "The trend appears to have slowed here," he said. "We're cautiously optimistic the efforts to combat it have worked." While some meth addicts leave the drug once they realize they can't function on a day-to-day basis like they can while using other drugs, selling a cheap, long-lasting drug didn't make financial sense to distributors, either. A strong community response is also credited with preventing a meth epidemic. Mary-Anne Jablonski, MLA for Red Deer-North, sat on the Premier's Task Force on Crystal Meth, which released a report on how to combat the drug in September 2006. She now applauds the efforts, but in hindsight she believes the task force should have had a wider scope. "I have come to the conclusion that we shouldn't have called it a crystal-meth task force, but a general drug-abuse task force." Meth was the big narcotics scare that perhaps overshadowed stories of wider drug use in every community the task force visited. Of the report's 83 recommendations, few have been implemented. "We did focus on crystal meth, and the exposure of how bad it was helped us get where we are today," Jablonski says. Galvin agrees. "There was a very focused community response to the issue with the police and community in general. Parents became interested and informed. Business owners caught on when someone came in and bought 500 over-the-counter diet pills." But Edmonton's drug problem hasn't dropped with the defusing of a potential meth explosion. Cocaine is still a healthy business in the city. Some dealers move a kilogram of the drug every week. Between three criminal groups in Edmonton, 100 kilograms can be turned every 10 days. The profits are enormous. A kilogram that costs roughly $30,000 and can be sold for as much as $120,000. Galvin's unit seized 46 kilograms of cocaine in 2006. He estimates that represents less than one per cent of the drug on city streets. While increased pressure on the cocaine trade might cause methamphetamines to re-surge to fill the void, "coke is the drug of choice," Galvin says. It's possible some people still ingest meth by accident, Sanderson says, because the cheap drug is used to cut other street-level narcotics like ecstacy. Police are still keeping a close eye on the drug. "We're still very concerned. It can take over a community once it takes hold," Sanderson says. "Vigilance is needed. It's still too early to declare victory." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake